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A64611 The summe of Christian religion, delivered by Zacharias Ursinus first, by way of catechism, and then afterwards more enlarged by a sound and judicious exposition, and application of the same : wherein also are debated and resolved the questions of whatsoever points of moment have been, or are controversed in divinitie / first Englished by D. Henry Parry, and now again conferred with the best and last Latine edition of D. David Pareus, sometimes Professour of Divinity in Heidelberge ; whereunto is added a large and full alphabeticall table of such matters as are therein contained ; together with all the Scriptures that are occasionally handled, by way either of controversie, exposition, or reconciliation, neither of which was done before, but now is performed for the readers delight and benefit ; to this work of Ursinus are now at last annexed the Theologicall miscellanies of D. David Pareus in which the orthodoxall tenets are briefly and solidly confirmed, and the contrary errours of the Papists, Ubiquitaries, Antitrinitaries, Eutychians, Socinians, and Arminians fully refuted ; and now translated into English out of the originall Latine copie by A.R. Ursinus, Zacharias, 1534-1583.; Parry, Henry, 1561-1616.; Pareus, David, 1548-1622. Theologicall miscellanies.; A. R. 1645 (1645) Wing U142; ESTC R5982 1,344,322 1,128

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Father is consubstantiall with him as likewise with the Son of and from whom he also is 3. What is the office of the holy Ghost THe office of the holy Ghost is sanctification Sanctification the office of the holy Ghost The parts of his office are five Spirit 〈…〉 copulatqu● ●●guqu● Et cen ol●tur●●●●●a salutis●●● which is wrought immediately by him from the Father and the Son and therefore he is called The Spirit of sanctification The chiefe parts of his office are To teach To regenerate To unite with Christ and God To governe To comfort To confirme or strengthen us The holy Ghost therefore To teach us John 14.26 and 10.13 Teacheth and illuminateth us that wee may know those things which wee ought and may conceive them aright according to Christs promise The holy Ghost whom the Father will send in my name hee shall teach you all things and bring all things to your remembrance which I have told you The Spirit of truth will lead you into all truth So he taught the Apostles at Whitsontide when they were raw before of Christs death and his kingdom he kindled in their hearts a new light he powred into them the miraculous knowledge of tongues and fulfilled the testimony and record of Joel Hereof he is called in Scripture The Teacher of truth the Spirit of wisdom revelation understanding counsell and knowledge c. To regenerate us He regenerateth us when he endoweth us with new qualities and putteth new inclinations in our hearts that is hee worketh faith and conversion in the hearts of the chosen John 3.5 Except a man be born of water and of the Spirit he cannot enter into the kingdome of God I baptise you with water to amendment of life but hee that cometh after me Mat. 3.11 hee will baptise you with the holy Ghost and with fire This baptisme which is wrought of Christ by the holy Ghost is the very regeneration or renewing it selfe the same which was signified by the outward baptisme of John and of other ministers To unite us with Christ Hee conjoyneth us with Christ that we may be his members and may be quickned by him and so maketh us partakers of all Christs benefits I will powr out my Spirit upon all flesh Joel 2.28 1 Cor. 6.11 19. But yee are washed but ye are sanctified but ye are justified in the name of the Lord Jesus and by the Spirit of our God Know ye not that your body is the temple of the holy Ghost which is in you 2 Cor. 12.3 4 13. whom ye have of God No man can say that Jesus is the Lord but by the holy Ghost There are diversities of gifts but the same Spirit By one Spirit we are all baptised into the same Spirit Hereby we know that he abideth in us 1 John 3.24 even by the same Spirit which he hath given us To rule and govern us Hee ruleth and governeth us Now to be ruled and guided by the holy Ghost is to be instructed with wisdome and counsell in the actions of our life and vocation and inclined to follow those things which are right and good and to perform the duties of love and charity towards God and our neighbour Rom. 8.14 As many as are led by the Spirit of God they are the sons of God And they began to speak with tongues Acts 2.4 as the Spirit of God gave them utterance To comfort us Acts 5.41 He comforteth us amidst our afflictions and dangers The Apostles who were first flying away for fear of the Jews now being erected by the comfort and solace of the holy Ghost come forth into open place and rejoice when they are to suffer for the confession of the Gospel John 14.16 He will give you another Comforter that he may abide with you for ever To confirm us in faith He confirmeth us which stagger and waver in faith and assureth us of salvation that is he continueth and cherisheth in us Christs benefits unto the end So he made the Apostles couragious and bold who were before timorous and wrapped and intangled with many doubts These things we may plainly see if we compare that Sermon which Peter made at Whitsontide with their speech who went to Emmaus who say Luke 24.21 John 16.22 and 14.16 Wee trusted that it had been he which should have delivered Israel Hereof Christ saith Your hearts shall rejoice and your joy shall no man take from you He shall abide with you for even Hence is he called the Spirit of boldnesse and the seale of our inheritance Divers titles of the holy Ghost These are the chiefe and principall parts of the holy Ghosts office who in respect of this his office hath divers titles of commendation in the Scripture for hereof he is called The Spirit of adoption Rom. 8.15 16. The Spirit of adoption because he assureth us of the fatherly good will of God towards us and is a witnesse unto us of that free goodnesse and mercy wherewith the Father imbraceth us in his only begotten Son Therefore by his Spirit we cry Abba Father The seal of our inheritance 2 Cor. 1.22 Ephes 1.13 14. He is called the earnest and seal of our inheritance because he assureth us of our salvation It is God which stablisheth us with you in Christ and hath annointed us who hath also sealed us and hath given the earnest of the Spirit in our hearts In which Gospel also after that yee beleeved yee were sealed with the holy Spirit of promise which is the earnest of our inheritance Life or Spirit of life Rom. 8.2 Hee is called life because he quickneth us or as the Apostle saith The Spirit of life who mortifieth the old man and quickeneth the new The law of the Spirit of life which is in Christ Jesus hath freed me from the law of sin and of death Water Ezek. 36.5 and 47.1 Hee is called water whereby hee refresheth us being almost dead in sin purgeth out sin and maketh us fruitfull that wee may bring forth the fruit of righteousnesse unto God Fire Matth. 3.9 Hee is called fire because he doth daily burn up and consume concupiscences and vices in us and kindleth our hearts with the love of God and our neighbour The fountain of living water Rev. 21.6 7.17 Hee is called the fountaine because celestiall riches do flow unto us from him and by him The Spirit of prayer Zech. 12.10 Rom. 8 2● He is called the Spirit of prayer because he stirreth us up unto prayer and instructeth us to pray I will powr upon the house of David and upon the inhabitants of Jerusalem the Spirit of grace and of prayer and they shall look upon me The Spirit also helpeth our infirmities for we know not what to pray as we ought The oyle of gladnesse Hebr. 9. The oyl of gladnesse because he maketh us joyfull forward and lively
evils And these though hell repines doth he work and witnes by the miserable cryes of men As it is said 2 Cor. 10.4 The weapons of our warfare are not carnall but mighty through God to the pulling down of the strong holds casting down imaginations and every high thing that exalteth it self against the knowledge of God and bringing into captivity every thought to the obedience of Christ And having in a readinesse to revenge all disobedience when your obedience is fulfilled As therefore the basenes of the vessell detracts nothing from the worth of the wares it containeth so our meane and infant expression of the doctrine may not so far be slighted as than it should derogate one whit from the weight of those motives which invite you to an ardent study of Divinity But whiles I meditate with my self that I am to take a view of some of those motives in this rehearfall Preface I am sensibly so overwhelmed with an infinite masse of matter of main importance that scarcely can I resolve whence to make an entrance But seeing that some of them must come into consideration The necessity of Catechismal instruction is pressed from these motives 1. Gods command we will put that foremost which ought to rule all our actions and indeavours namely the serious will of God expressed in apparent commands For now we which are citizens of the Church have conference together and know for certain that the books of the Prophets and Apostles are most infallible declarations of the mind and will of God And in them here and there are certain precepts delivered and rehearsed which injoyn men a diligent search and knowledg of the doctrine contained in those books Such is the precept of the Decalogue touching the Sabbath Such is that speech of our Saviour Luke 10.41 One thing is necessary The knowledge of this wisdom saith he is eternall life This David commendeth as frequently in other places so in the first Psalme which he writeth as an Epitomie of it for that it is a companion of true blessednes But these have not satisfied our man-loving heavenly Father that is solicitous of our salvation He addeth further peculiar precepts touching that summe of doctrine that is to be published to all especially the youth namely the doctrine of Catechismall instruction Deut. 4.9 Teach them thy sons Deut. 6.6 7. These words shall be in thine heart Thou shalt teach them diligently unto thy children c. And thou shalt binde them for a signe upon thine hand and they shall be as frontlets between thine eyes Here doe we heare Parents and those to whom the charge of Parents is committed commanded that they care to teach or see taught the youth the youth commanded that they learne and both are commanded that they daily inculcate rehearse and meditate on this doctrine This doctrine would the Lord have both to be delivered unto children and also to be in our view continually And its apparent that brevity and plainnes are required which what else they but a Catechisme or summe of doctrine neither prolixe nor obscure So Saint Paul 2. Tim. 1.13 Hold fast the forme of sound words which thou hast heard of mee in faith and love which is in Christ Jesus In this precept of using and holding his Catechisme we heare the definition of ours The forme of sound words of C●●echism●l instruct●o● described 1 More largely The Apostle meaning a draught or plat-forme of sound positions concerning each point of doctrine methodically and briefly comprised as if it were painted before the eye together with a kinde and maner of teaching and expression as is both proper plain and agreeable with the stile of the Prophets and Apostles Therefore doth he name sound words delivered by him concerning faith and love in Christ i.e. in the knowledge of Christ as in sundry places he reduceth all piety to faith and love A Catechisme then is a summe of doctrine delivered by the Prophets and Apostles concerning faith and love in Christ 2 More briefly two wayes Or is a summe of doctrine of Christianity briefly methodically and plainly couched together For it is not for us to invent opinions but of necessity we must referre our selves as it is Esay 8.20 to the Law and the Testimony And there must be added an exposition which may be both a manifestation of the parts and method and an interpretation of words and phrases This reason if there were no more is of efficacy to them that are not of prophane minds to excite them to the study of this sacred doctrine For to such the command of God is a cause of all causes though nothing more be added But when as God is so indulgent to our weaknes as to declare unto us the causes of this command needs must we weigh them wtih reverence Now God avoucheth that therefore must we learn this doctrine because by the knowledge thereof 2. Motive our salvation and not any other way will he convert and save all that by age are of understanding and are to be made heires of eternall life Marvelous confidently is that spoken of Saint Paul Rom. 1.16 The Gospel is the power of God to salvation c. And 1 Cor. 1.18 The preaching of the Crosse is to them that perish foolishnesse but unto us which are saved it is the power of God And Ver. 21. It pleased God by the fool shnesse of preaching to save them that beleeve But this opinion howsoever it be delivered and confirmed by divers and weighty testimonies of the holy Spirit is oppugned by the utmost endeavours of Sathan Against the Zwenckf●●dians touching the point of the ●fficacy of the Spirit by the ministiy of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For the Father of lyes seeing how the Paradox of the foolishnesse of preaching the Crosse of Christ doth not a little pierce the minds of men snatcheth an occasion of suborning fanaticall minded men who cry out that the worke of the ministry is nothing lesse than the means of converting men but that God communicates himself to us immediately and that wee Ministers make our voice an Idoll They babble forth many wonderfull words carrying with them indeed a shew of special illumination but heare and consider I pray upon what foundation they relye and how they oppose their wisedome to the divine The omnipotent God say they doth not at all need that voice ministry reading meditation to convert men Therefore he useth not this instrument neither is a necessity of labour in learning it to be imposed upon those that are to be saved Now say I to you young men Is there any one among you so weak and childish in judgment that doth not perceive such a one to be hissed at that would so argue God can by his omnipotency easily bring to passe that one without bookes teachers study should become skilfull in all learning and doctrine as the Apostles and others of the Primitive Church spake with tongues
Trinity and yet all three persons have their joynt-working in them neither did the Father and the holy Ghost redeem mankind neither do the Father and the Son sanctifie the faithfull Ans It is a fallacie grounding upon that which is affirmed but in respect as if it were simply affirmed For the Creation is given to the Father Redemption to the Son Sanctification to the holy Ghost not as they are simply an operation or work for so should the other two persons be excluded from it but in respect of the order and manner of working which is peculiar and proper to every of them in producing and bringing forth the same externall work A more open declaration hereof may be this The works of our creation redemption and sanctification are the operations of the Godhead outwardly that is externall operations which God worketh on his creatures and they are undivided that is common to the three persons which they by common will and power work in the creatures by reason of that one and the same essence and nature of the Godhead which they have For the Scripture attributeth the Creation not onely to the Father but to the Sonne also and the holy Ghost All things were made by it John 1.3 Genes 1.2 Matth. 1.20 Psal 33.6 The Spirit of the Lord moved upon the waters That which is conceived in her is of the holy Ghost By the Word of the Lord were the heavens made and all the hosts of them by the breath of his mouth Likewise our Redemption is attributed to the Father and the holy Ghost John 3.17 Titus 3.5 6. God sent his Sonne into the world that the world might be saved by him Hee saved us by the renewing of the holy Ghost which hee shed on us abundantly And Sanctification both to the Father and to the Son God hath sent the Spirit of his Sonne into our hearts crying Gal. 4.6 1 Thess 5.23 1 Cor. 1.30 Ephes 5.26 Abba Father The very God of peace sanctifie you throughout Christ is made sanctification unto us Christ sanctifieth the Church All the persons therefore create redeem and sanctifie Why distinct operations or workings are attributed to the three persons Neverthelesse yet in respect of that order of working which is between them Creation is ascribed unto the Father not excluding the other persons but because hee is the fountain as of the Divinity of the Son and the holy Ghost so also of those divine operations which hee worketh and performeth by the Sonne and the holy Ghost Redemption is ascribed unto the Sonne not excluding the other two persons but because he is that person which executeth the Fathers will concerning the redeeming of mankind and doth immediatly perform the work of our redemption for the Son only was sent into the flesh and hath paid the ransome or price for our sins not the Father nor the Spirit To the holy Ghost is ascribed Sanctification not excluding the other two persons from this action but because it doth immediatly sanctifie us Object 2. The externall workes of the Godhead that is such as the whole three persons exercise not mutually one towards another but execute in the creatures are indivisible or cannot be divided that is they are not appropriated unto any one of the three persons without respect unto the other But Creation Redemption and Sanctification are externall workes of the Godhead Therefore they are indivisible and by force of good consequent there needeth no such distinction of them as is proposed Answer to the Major The works of the Trinitie are indivisible but with retaining to each person his proper and peculiar manner of working All three persons therefore work on the creatures but yet that order still is inviolably kept as that the Father still is the fountaine of the operations of the Sonne and the holy Ghost and doth all things not of any other but of himselfe by the Sonne and the holy Ghost the Sonne doth all things of the Father by the holy Ghost the holy Ghost doth all things of the Father and the Sonne by himselfe For The Father createth but mediately by the Sonne and the holy Ghost the Sonne from the Father and the holy Ghost from the Father and the Sonne The Father and the holy Ghost redeeme us but mediately by the Sonne but the Sonne immediately from the Father by the holy Ghost The Father and the Sonne sanctifie us but mediately by the holy Ghost but the holy Ghost immediately from the Father and the Sonne But as concerning the works of the Trinitie which are called outward and inward works it shall be more fully enlarged when wee come to handle the last Question save one of the doctrine touching GOD. a Deut. 6.4 Isa 44.6 45.5 1 Cor. 8.4 6. Ephes 4.6 Quest 25. Seeing there is but one only substance of God why namest thou these three the Father the Son and the holy Ghost Answ Because God hath so manifested himself in his word b Gen. 1.2 3. Psalm 33.6 Isa 6.1 3. 48.16 61.1 Mat. 3.16 17. 28.19 John 12.40 14.26 15.26 2 Cor. 13.13 Gal. 4.6 Ephes 2.18 Tit. 3.5 6. 1 John 5.7 that these three distinct persons are that one true and everlasting God The Explication IN this Question is contained the doctrine of the Church concerning one God Questions concerning God and the three persons of the Godhead The principall questions therein are 1. Whence it may appeare that there is a God 2. What hee is or what manner of God the God of the Church is whom wee worship and in what hee differeth from idols 3. Whether he be One only and in what sense there are said to be many gods 4. What the name of Essence Person and Trinity signifie and how they differ 5. Whether these names are to be used in the Church and whether they are had in the Scripture 6. How many persons there be of the God-head 7. How they differ and are to be distinguished one from another 8. For what cause it is necessary that the Doctrine of the Trinity bee held in the Church 1. Whether there be a God and whence it appeareth THe great misery of mans nature cannot be sufficiently thought upon that whereas it was created to the bright knowledge and even the very image of God it is fallen so far as not only it is ignorant who and what God is but also maketh disputation Three causes which have made men to doubt whether there be a God whether there be any God in heaven or no. The causes of this evill the Church alone doth understand the first whereof is The blindnesse and corruption of mans nature after his fall the next The instigation of the divell who would have the whole opinion of God razed out of the minds of men unto which cometh the horrible confusion of mans life and humane affairs in that oftentimes the wicked flourish and the godly either are oppressed by them
have a beginning in respect of their persons and have their essence communicated unto them from some other Untrue They have a beginning in respect of their essence Sunt essentiati or They are essenced or have their essence produced from the Father or They have their essence produced from some other It is truely said The first person of the Deity begate the second of his owne essence The third person proceeded from the first and second But not truely The divine essence begate a divine essence or The person is begotten or proceedeth of the essence True it is to say The divine essence is communicated Untrue The divine essence is born or proceedeth The reason is because to be communicated is not the same as to be begotten but stretcheth farther For not whatsoever is communicated to the begotten is also begotten but that is begotten to which the substance of him that begetteth is communicated 2. Of the outward operations of the three persons Another difference of the persons ariseth out of the former consisting of the order of their externall operations which they exercise towards the creatures and in them and by them For these actions I grant are wrought be the common will power and efficacy of the Father Son and holy Ghost but yet that order still of the persons being kept which they have in their subsisting The Father is the fountain as of the persons so of the operations of the Son and of the holy Ghost and he doth all things not of any other that is no other working by him no others will preventing his no other imparting to him power or efficacy but of himselfe that is as hee subsisteth of himselfe so hee understandeth and worketh of himselfe But the Son and holy Ghost do not work of themselves but by themselves that is the Son worketh the Fathers will going before the holy Ghost worketh the will going before both of the Father and the Son The Father worketh by the Son and the holy Ghost and sendeth them but is not sent of them the Son worketh by the holy Ghost sendeth him from the Father into the hearts of the beleevers but is not sent of him but of the Father The holy Ghost worketh and is sent from both the Father and the Son not from himselfe All things were made (a) Joh. 1.3 Col. 1.16 Heb. 1.2 by him The Son can do nothing (b) Joh. 5.19 of himself save that he seeth the Father do For whatsoever things he doth the same things doth the Son also I proceeded forth and came (c) Joh. 8.42 John 14.26 John 5.26 from God neither came I of my self but he sent me Whom the Father will send in my name Whom I will send unto you from the Father What the sending of the Son holy Ghost meaneth Now when the Son and holy Ghost are said to be sent we may not understand this sending as if it were any locall motion or as if it were any change in God but we must understand it of his everlasting will and decree of accomplishing ought by the Son and holy Ghost and of the execution and manifestation of this his will by the working of the Son and holy Ghost So saith the Son that he was sent of the Father into the world that he came down from heaven and yet that he was in heaven whilest he remained on the earth So the holy Ghost though he were before in the Apostles and dwelt in them yet he is said to be sent unto them in the day of Pentecost Both these persons therfore were sent into the world not that therby they became present somewhere where before they were not but because the Son wrought in the world whatsoever was the will of the Father and shewed himself present and powerfull according to his Fathers good pleasure as it is said God sent forth his Son made of a woman And because ye are sons Gal. 4.46 God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son into your hearts which cryeth Abba Father 8. Why it is necessary that this doctrine of the Trinity should be held and maintained in the Church The doctrine of the Trinity to be taught in the Church THis doctrine of the Trinity is to be learned and held in the Church In respect of Gods glory In respect of the glory of God that God may be discerned and distinguished from idols For God will not be matched with idols but will have himself to be worshipped and celebrated and therefore known and agnized for such a one as hee hath declared himself to be In regard of our salvation In regard of our owne salvation and comfort No man is saved who knoweth not the Father and the Father is not known without the Son For No man hath seen God at any time John 1.18 1 John 2.23 the onely begotten Son which is in the bosome of the Father hee hath declared him Whosoever denyeth the Son the same hath not the Father Again No man is freed and saved from sin and death without beleeving in the Mediatour Christ He is very God and eternall life 1 John 5.20 But no man reposeth trust and confidence in the Son when as yet he is not known unto him Rom. 10.14 How shall they call on him in whom they have not beleeved How shall they beleeve in him of whom they have not heard Therefore we must first know the Son and then for the Son wee must know the Father that we may beleeve in him Likewise no man is sanctified and saved by the holy Ghost who knoweth not the holy Ghost For he who receiveth not the holy Ghost is not saved according to that saying of Scripture Rom. 8.9 He that hath not the Spirit of Christ the same is not his But no man receiveth him whom hee knoweth not Therefore hee who knoweth him not is not saved That no man receiveth him whom hee knoweth not is proved by those words of Christ The Spirit of truth the world cannot receive because it seeth him not Joh. 14.17 neither knoweth him Except a man be born again of water and the Spirit hee cannot enter into the kingdome of heaven Hence it manifestly appeareth That they which will be saved must necessarily know the Father the Son and the holy Ghost And they must know that the Son and the holy Ghost are distinct from the Father but yet consubstantiall with the Father and equall in perfections honour worship and therefore the same true God which is the Father For except God be known of us to be such as he hath declared himselfe to be he doth not communicate himself unto us neither may we look or hope for everlasting life from him And what he hath shewed himself to be wee have heard namely That hee is the eternall Father co-eternall Son and co-eternall holy Ghost But among all points there is none more sharply oppugned by the adversaries of the truth then
a benefit Christ is made unto us righteousnesse wisdome sanctification and redemption Ye are compleat in him 1 Cor. 1.30 Col. 2.9 which is the head of all principality c. The death of Christ is the impellent or motive cause in effectuating as well our justification as our regeneration in two respects 1. In respect of God because for the death of Christ God pardoneth us our sins and giveth us the holy Ghost and restoreth in us his image Being justified in his bloud Rom. 5.9 10 Gal. 4.6 Being reconciled to God through the death of his Son Because ye are sonnes God hath sent forth the spirit of his Sonne into your hearts which cryeth Abba Father 2. In respect of us also it is an impellent cause because they who apprehend Christs merit by a true faith and apply his death unto themselves for them it is impossible to be unthankfull or not indeavour to live to the praise and honour of his name which is to begin newnesse of life The application of Christs death and the consideration thereof will not suffer us to be ungratefull but forceth us to love Christ again and prove therein our thankfulnesse for so inestimable a benefit No man therfore may imagine any remission of sins without regeneration and he lieth unto himselfe and the world who boasteth of Christs death applied to himself yet hath no desire to live godly and holily to the honor of Christ For all after they are once justified prepare and addresse themselves to doe those things which are gratefull unto God For regeneration or the desire and endeavouring of obeying God cannot be separated from the applying of his death unto us nor the benefit of regeneration from the benefit of justification All who are justified are also regenerated and sanctified and all who are regenerate are also justified Object The Apostle attributeth our regeneration to Christs resurrection why then is regeneration here attributed to his death 1 Pet. 1.3 Answ It is attributed unto Christs death as touching his merit for he merited regeneration for us by dying And it is attributed to Christs resurrection in respect of the applying of it for by rising from the dead hee applyeth unto us regeneration and giveth us the holy Ghost Eternall life Eternall life is also the fruit of Christs death God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever beleeveth in him should not perish but have everlasting life John 3.16 1 John 5.12 God hath given unto us eternall life and this life is in his Son The meaning of the Article I beleeve in Christ dead Now what is it To beleeve in Christ dead Ans It is to beleeve that Christ hath not only suffered extreme torments for my sake but also death it selfe and hath by his death obtained for mee remission of sins and reconciliation with God and consequently also the holy Ghost who beginneth in me a new life that I may again be made the Temple of God and at length attain unto everlasting life wherein I shall worship and magnifie God for ever Quest 44. Why is there added He descended into hell Ans That in my greatest paines and most grievous tentations I may support my selfe with the comfort that my Lord Jesus Christ hath delivered me by the unspeakable distresses torments and terrours of his soule into which hee was plunged both before a Psal 18.5 6. 116.3 Mat. 26.36 27.46 Heb. 5.7 and then especially when he hanged on the Crosse from the straits and torments of hell b Esay 53.5 The Explication Two things are here to be handled 1. The true sense and meaning of this Article 2. The use 1. What the true sense of this Article is or what the descent of Christ into Hell signifieth HEll in Scripture is taken three waies For it signifieth 1. The Grave Three significations of hell in Scripture Then yee shall bring my gray-head with sorrow unto hell Thou wile not leave my soule in hell neither wilt thou suffer thine holy One to see corruption 2. The place of the damned as in the story of the rich man and Lazarus The Glutton being in hell in torments Gen. 42.38 Psal 16.10 lift up his eyes and saw Abraham a farre off and Lazarus in his bosome If I lye downe in hell thou art there 3. The paines of hell that is the terrours and torments of the soule and conscience The paines of hell gate hold upon mee Luke 16.23 Psal 139.8 The Lord bringeth downe to hell and raiseth up that is into exceeding paines and torments out of which afterwards he againe delivereth Psal 116.3 In this third sense it is taken in this Article For it cannot be understood in the first sense of the Grave 1. Because it is said before Hee was buried If any say Why he I is not here taken for the grave that this latter Article is an exposition of the former he saith nothing For as often as two speeches expressing the same thing are joyned together so that the one is an exposition of the other it is meet that the latter be more cleere and open than the former which here is cleane contrary For. To descend into hell is more obscure than to be buried 2. It is not likely in this so brief and succinct a Confession that the same things should be twice spoken in other words Neither can this place be understood of the place of the damned Why hell is not here taken for the place of the damned as is proved by this division 1. If Christ did locally descend into Hell he descended either as touching his God-head or as touching his soule or as touching his body Not as touching his God-head For this is every-where Nor as touching his body For that rested in the grave three dayes as was prefigured by Jonas the type of Christ Because no part of Christ could be in hell neither rose it from any other place but from the grave Nor us touching his soule 1. Because Scripture no where expresseth and mentioneth it 2. Because Christ dying on the Crosse Luke 23.46 23 4● Christs soule descended not locally said of his soule Father into thy hands I commend my spirit And to the Theefe This day shalt thou be with mee in Paradise Therefore the soule of Christ after his death was in the hand of his Father in Paradise not in Hell And that cavill little steadeth the Adversaries of this doctrine that hee might be also in the hand of his Fathe● that is in his Fathers protection even in Hell according to that Psal 139.8 If I lye downe in Hell thou art there that is there also will God have care of me and there also will he keep me that I perish not for one place interpreteth another And he had said before unto the Thief This day shalt thou be with me in Paradise Luke 23.43 that is in
and sanctification John 3.5 Except a man be borne againe of water and of the Spirit 2 Cor. 3. ●8 c. Wee are changed into the same image from glory to glory as by the Spirit of the Lord. The governing of the actions and whole life of the godly As many as are led by the Spirit of God Rom. 8.14 they are the sonnes of God They were forbidden of the holy Ghost to preach the word in Asia Acts 16.6 Comforting in temptations The Comforter is the holy Ghost John 14.26 whom the Father will send in my name Acts 9.31 The Churches were edified and multiplyed by the comfort of the holy Ghost I will powre upon the house of David the Spirit of grace and compassion Zech. 12.10 The strengthening and preserving of the regenerate against the force of temptation even unto the end The Spirit of strength shall rest upon him Isa 11.2 John 14.16 Ephes 1.13 Hee shall give you another Comforter that hee may abide with you for ever In whom also yee are sealed with the holy Spirit of promise The pardoning of sins and adopting the sonnes of God Yee have received the Spirit of adoption Rom. 8.15 ● Cor. 1.17 1 Cor. 6.11 Where the Spirit of the Lord is there is liberty Yee are justified in the name of our Lord Jesus and by the Spirit of our God The bestowing of salvation and life everlasting John 6.63 It is the Spirit that quickeneth If the Spirit of him which raised up Christ from the dead dwell in you Rom. 8.11 hee that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortall bodies because that his Spirit dwelleth in you Judgement and sentence against sin John 16.8 When the Comforter shall come he shall reprove the world of sin Mat. 12.23 The blasphemy against the holy Ghost shall not be forgiven unto men His divine honour Equall and the same honour is given to the holy Ghost which is given both to the Father and the Son To no creature but to God alone is to be given divine honour that is honour proper to God only But this is given to the holy Ghost Therefore hee is God equall with the Father and the Son 1 John 5.7 There are three which bear witnesse in heaven the Father the Word and the holy Ghost and these three are one The holy Ghost therefore is the same true God with the Father and the Son Goe and teach all nations baptizing them in the name of the Father and the Sonne and the holy Ghost By this testimony wee are taught Mat. 18.19 1. That wee are baptized also into the name faith worship and religion of the holy Ghost 2. That the holy Ghost is authour also of baptisme and the ministery In like sort also we beleeve and put our trust in him Let not your hearts be troubled I will pray the Father John 14.1 16. and hee shall give you another Comforter that hee may abide with you for ever That sin which is committed against him is not remitted therefore wee sin against him We are his temple Ye are the temple of the holy Ghost 1 Cor. 3.16 and the Spirit of God dwelleth in you The Apostles in their Epistles wish unto the Churches grace and peace from the holy Ghost The communion of the holy Ghost be with you Cor. 13.13 Object 1. Hee that is sent is not equall with him that sendeth The holy Ghost is sent and the Father and the Son send him Therefore the holy Ghost is not equall with the Father and the Son Ans We deny the Major For Christ that is sent may be equall with him that sendeth for Christ also being sent of the Father yet is equall with the Father this sending doth not betoken any servile subjection Object 2. He that receiveth of another is not equall with him that giveth The holy Ghost receiveth of the Father and the Son Therefore he is not equall with both Ans The Major is true of one that receiveth of another but a part and not the whole but the holy Ghost receiveth the same and whole essence of the Father and the Son Again it is true of him that receiveth in time or successively but the holy Ghost receiveth before all time Thirdly to the Minor we say that he received as touching the ordaining and sending of him unto us to teach us immediately but this sending establisheth and confirmeth his equality because it is a divine work and the ordaining of him to teach us immediately doth not lessen but strengthen his equality Obj. 3. The Father made all things by the Son therefore he made the holy Ghost by him also Answ The Father made all things by the Son John 1.3 that is all things that were made because it is said And without him was made nothing that was made But the holy Ghost is not made but proceedeth from the Father and the Son Three proofs that the holy Ghost is consubstantiall with the Father and the Son IIII. That the holy Ghost is consubstantiall that is one and the same true God with the Father and the Sonne is proved by these reasons 1. Because hee is the Fathers and the Sons Spirit But the divine essence cannot be multiplied as neither can another be created nor the same divided Therefore the selfe-same and the whole must needs be communicated to the holy Ghost which is the essence of the Father and the Son From both which the holy Ghost proceedeth as the Spirit of God in God and of God 2. There is but one true God The holy Ghost is true God therefore the holy Ghost is that one and the same true God with the Father and the Son consubstantiall with both 3. There is but one Jehovah that is but one divine essence or being one essentially who alone is of none but himselfe communicateth his being to all things and preserveth it in them The holy Ghost is Jehovah * See 〈◊〉 ●6 1 34. Heb. ●7 8 9 10. Lev. 16.11 12. and 2 Cor. 6.16 Deut. 9 2● Isa 63. Psal 95.7 Heb. 3.7 Isa 6.7 Act. 28.25 1.16 4.24 25. therefore he is the same with the Father and the Son God consubstantially with both Object Hee that is of another is not consubstantiall with him or is not the same with him of or from whom he is The holy Ghost is of the Father and the Sonne Therefore hee is not the same with them or consubstantiall Answ The Major is true in creatures but not in God 2. There is an ambiguity in this terme to be of another He that is of another and hath not the same or whole essence is not consubstantiall But the holy Ghost hath the same and whole essence and therefore it followeth only that he is not the same person Therefore by inverting the argument we answer that he who is of the Father and from the
Wherefore God even thy God hath annointed thee with the oyle of gladnesse The Comforter Hee is called the Comforter because hee worketh faith in us and purifieth our consciences and so comforteth us that wee exult and rejoice in afflictions The Intercessour He is called Intercessour because the Spirit maketh request or intercession for us with sighs which cannot be expressed The Spirit of truth c. He is called lastly the Spirit of truth of wisdome of joy of gladnesse of fear of God of boldnesse and the like Object 1. Those parts of the Spirits office before specified are not proper to the holy Ghost but belong also to the Father and the Son Therefore they are not well assigned to the holy Ghost as proper Answ They belong also the Father and the Son but mediately by the holy Ghost But unto the holy Ghost they belong immediately Rep. But after the same manner also it seemeth that the preservation of things the invention of arts and sciences and the like are to be attributed as proper functions unto the holy Ghost for those also doth the Father and the Son work by the holy Ghost according as it is said The Spirit of the Lord filleth all the world Wisd 17. Ans To the assigning of a work as proper unto the holy Ghost is required not only that it be immediately done by him but in such wise also as that he be acknowledged and worshipped therein Now there doth the holy Ghost work properly where he sanctifieth and halloweth for therefore also is he called holy Object 2. It was said before that the holy Ghost is the earnest of our inheritance But Saul and Ju●as had the holy Ghost neither yet obtained they the inheritance but were reprobate Therefore the holy Ghost is not the earnest of our inheritance Ans Saul and Judas had the holy Ghost a●●oncerning some gifts of the holy Ghost but they had not the Spirit of adoption Repl. But it is the same Spirit Ans It is the same Spirit indeed but doth not work the same things in all For he worketh adoption and conversion in the elect only Here therefore we are to intreat of the gifts of the holy Ghost and their differences 4. What and of how many sorts the gifts of the holy Ghost are Two sorts of the holy Ghosts gifts ALl the gifts of the holy Ghost may be referred to the parts of his office before rehearsed namely our illumination and enlightning the gift of tongues the gift of prophecie of interpretation of miracles our faith regeneration prayer strength 1. Common to both godly and ungodly and constancy c. These gifts are of two sorts Some are common to the godly and ungodly some are proper to the godly and elect only Those again which are common to the godly and ungodly are two-fold for some of them are given but to certain men and at certain times as the gift of miracles and of tongues prophecies the faith of miracles and these were necessary for the Aposties and the primitive Church when the Gospel was first to be dispersed therefore they were miraculously bestowed on them Some are given to all the members of the Church and at all times as the gift of tongues the gift of interpretation sciences arts prudence learning eloquence and such like all which pertain to the maintenance and preservation of the ministery These are now also given to every member of the Church according to the measure of Christs gift as the calling vocation of every member needeth though they be not miraculously bestowed as they were on the Apostles 2. Proper unto the godly but attained unto by labour and study The gifts of the holy Ghost proper unto the godly are all those things which we comprehend under the name of sanctification and adoption as justifying faith regeneration true prayer unfained love of God and our neighbour hope patience constancy and other gifts profitable to salvation John 14.17 Rom. 8.16 26. these are all conferred on the elect alone in their conversion Whom the world cannot receive The Spirit witnesseth with our spirit that we are the sons of God The Spirit maketh request for us with sighs which cannot be expressed Hence is he called the Spirit of adoption Obj. Many out of the Church have had tongues and sciences The tongues therefore and sciences are not the gifts of the holy Ghost Ans The tongues and sciences out of the Church are also the gifts of the holy Ghost but by a generall working of God which is without the true knowledge of him But in the Church the tongues and sciences are the gifts of the holy Ghost joined with the true knowledge of God Moreover all those gifts as we have said are fitly referred to those five principall parts before numbred of the holy Ghosts office as the knowledge of tongues and of sciences to his function of teaching and that miraculous and extraordinary gift of tongues partly to his function of ruling for the holy Ghost did rule and govern their tongues partly to his function of teaching and confirming So also the gift of prophecy and interpretation belongeth to his office of teaching for hee teacheth both by illightning the minds within by his vertue and by instructing them without by the word The institution and ordinance of the Sacraments appertaineth to his office of teaching but chiefly to his office of confirming Faith and conversion belong to his office of regenerating and conjoyning us with Christ That he is the Spirit of prayer instructing us how to pray belongeth to his office of ruling and governing In like sort the rest of the gifts may be referred to certain parts of the holy Ghosts office 5. Of whom the holy Ghost is given and wherefore he is given 1. Of the Father by the Son HEe is given of the Father and the Son and also by the Son of the Father but not by the Father for the Father giveth the holy Ghost from no other but from himself as who is of no other but of himself neither worketh from any other but from himself The Son giveth the holy Ghost from the Father from whom also himself both worketh and is That he is given of and from the Father 2. Of the Son from the Father Acts 1.4 2.17 these testimonies do confirm Hee commandeth them to wait for the promise of the Father I will powr out of my spirit upon all flesh I will pray the Father and he shall give you another Comforter John 14.16 17. The Father will send him in my name That the holy Ghost is given of the Son these testimonies do prove I will send you from the Father the Spirit of truth If I depart John 15.26 and 16.7 I will send him unto you Since he by the right hand of God hath been exalted Acts 2.33 and hath received of his Father the promise of the holy Ghost he hath shed forth
pray according to faith and without faith no man can be assured that he shall be heard neither receiveth he what he asketh Considence in the Mediatour A confidence in the Mediatiour that we may resolve that both our person and our prayers please God not for our owne worthinesse but for Christs sake our Mediatour So Daniel prayeth that hee may be heard for the Lords sake Dan. 9.17 John 16.23 Heb. 13 10. and Christ willeth us to pray unto his Father in his Name Our prayers are to be put on our Altar Christ so shall they be acceptable to God Confidence of being heard Confidence of being heard In the former Faith is required whereby we with full confidence resolve that we are through Christs merit just before God and that God is reconciled unto us by Christ Here the faith of being heard is required which cannot stand without the former faith of being justified Because yee are sons God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son into your hearts which crieth Abba Father Hee that cometh to God must beleeve that God is and that hee is a rewarder of them that seeke him But here in this full perswasion of being heard A difference of things to be prayed for wee are to observe the difference of such things as are to be desired Some gifts are necessary to salvation as spirituall gifts Some are corporall without which wee may be saved Spirituall blessings are simply to be desired with a trust and full perswasion of being heard even that we shall receive them as we desire that is in speciall But gifts which are not necessary to salvation whether they be corporall or else such spirituall as without which wee may be saved these are to be desired verily but with a condition of Gods will and pleasure that he will give them us if they serve for his glory and be profitable for us or that he will give us other of better quality either at this or some other time Wee must follow in asking these benefits the Leper which said Lord if thou wilt thou canst make mee cleane For neither doe the Elect when they aske such things desire simply to be heard For oftentimes wee aske things Matth. 8.2 not knowing what and what manner of things they be and so neither know wee whether the obtaining of them in speciall if we should be heard in them will profit us or be pernicious and hurtfull to us Object Hee that asketh doubtfully asketh not according to faith neither is heard Wee aske corporall blessings doubtfully because wee aske them with condition Therefore not according to faith Answ 1. The Major is either particular or false For the nature of faith requireth that wee be certaine not of all corporall benefits but onely of spiri●uall blessings which are necessary to salvation as of remission of sinnes and of life everlasting In corporall blessings it sufficeth if faith submit it selfe to Gods Word and crave and looke for such things as are availeable to salvation Answ 2. The Minor also may be denied For albeit we aske corporall blessings with a condition yet do we not simply doubt of obtaining them For wee beleeve that wee shall receive those corporall blessings which wee aske of God so that they be expedient for us unto salvation and otherwise if they are like to prove hurtfull unto us wee desire not to be heard in that which we pray Therefore we neverthelesse aske in faith while we submit our selves to the Word and Will of God and desire to be heard according to his good pleasure For faith submitteth it selfe to every word and will of God and the will of God is this That wee aske spirituall things simply and corporall conditionally and that we resolve with our selves that we shall receive the former in speciall but the latter as farre forth as they serve for Gods glory and our salvation And thus if wee pray wee doubt not to be heard A confidence in Gods promise A confidence and trust in Gods promise that wee know and think that God hath promised to heare as many as call upon him with those conditions before alledged Call upon mee in the time of trouble Psal 59.15 Esay 65.24 so will I heare thee and thou shalt praise mee Before they call I will answer and whiles they speake I will heare Without this promise of hearing● there is no faith without faith prayer is but vaine Except wee give faith and credit to Gods promises and think of them while we are praying they availe us nothing neither can we desire ought with good conscience but rather when after this sort we know not what we aske doubting of Gods hearing of our petition we doe not pray but mock God Now the confidence which we have of Gods promise in hea●ing us breadeth in us a certainty of his hearing and our salvation and this certainty kindleth in us a study of invocation and of making supplications unto God By these conditions and circumstances of sincere and true prayer it doth easily appeare A difference between the prayer of the godly and the wicked how much the praying of the godly and the wicked differ The godly endeavour to observe all these conditions in their praying The wicked contrarily either omit and neglect them all or keeping one or two conditions erre in the rest Some erre in the knowledge of the nature and will of God therein omitting the first condition some erre in the things which are to be asked when they aske either evill things or uncertaine or nor approved by God Some aske these hypocritically some without a feeling of their want some not with a confidence in the Mediatour some persisting in their wickednesse thinke yet that God heareth them some desire things necessary to salvation with a distrust and diffidence some lastly aske not thinking of Gods promise and therefore not according to faith ON THE 46. SABBATH Quest 119. What Prayer is that Ans Our Father a Mat. 6.9 10 11 12 13. Luk. 11.2 3 4. which art in heaven Hallowed be thy Name Thy kingdome come Thy will be done in earth as it is in heaven Give us this day our daily bread And forgive us our trespasses as we forgive them that trespasse against us And leade us not into temptation but deliver us from evill For thine is the kingdome the power and the glory for ever and ever Amen The Explication THe forme of prayer prescribed by Christ unto us is recited by the two Evangelists Mat●hew and Luke This questionlesse is the best most certain and most perfect forme of prayer for it was delivered by Christ who is the Wisdome of God and his words his heavenly Father alwaies acknowledgeth and heareth Moreover it containeth most briefly all things that are to be desired necessary for the soule and body Lastly it is a rule whereby all our prayers must be directed Two causes why Christ del●vered unto us this form
not only is still unknowne to the wiseest and most sharp-witted of men Angels in part ignorant of the Gospel till they were informed by the word of Christ unlesse they be taught by the voice of the Church and efficacy of the Spirit but also in a great part was unknown to the Angels themselves before it was disclosed by the Son from the secret bosome of his eternall Father Which to unfold and praise if men and Angels should bend all the strength of wit and eloquence 1 Pet 1.12 yet were they never able to speak of it according to the due compasse and worth of the thing Whiles therefore I think with my self how much I might sinke under this charge I had rather it were committed to another who at least might somewhat better and more successively undergoe the same But when I well weigh the nature of mine office I perceive I ought with all cheerefulnesse both to help forward your salvation and obey God that calls me to so honourable an imployment especially he promising mee assistance with which whosoever are assisted may despaire in nothing for God will be effectuall by weak and abject meanes according to that of the Psalmist Out of the mouthes of babes and sucklings hast thou ordained strength Psal 8.2 The word there used signifieth a child which beginneth to understand and speak There are that are commonly called children not onely in regard of age but also in regard of ability of understanding Two sorts of children or performance of any action Infants though such in age are sufficient witnesses of the divine goodnesse and providence being cleare evidences of Gods presence in the wonderfull propagation conservation and education of humane off-spring Humane off-spring an argument a gainst Atheists denying God abundantly confuting Divels and all Atheists that deny either God to be God or to be such a God as hee hath said himselfe 〈…〉 Our Saviour interpreteth that saying of the Psalmist of confession Acts 17.27 28 29. Mat. 21.16 In which kind it agreeth unto us all who do meditate or speak any thing concerning God For we are all infants in understanding and utterance In some kind wee are all infants touching all matters divine In this life we attain but some small beginnings of those things as the Emperour Gratian in his confession to Ambrose piously and truely writes We speak saith hee of God not what we ought but what we are able yea the Prophets and the Apostles themselves confesse the same thing 1 Cor. 13.9 For we know in part and we prophesie in part but when that which is perfect is come then that which is in part shall be done away And in v. 12. Now we see through a glasse darkely but then face to face But notwithstanding the beginnings wee learne are small and also the voice of the ministery be proportioned to our capacity therein God himself speaking with us as with babes and permitteth us like babes to speak to him yet so would the Lord have the doctrine touching himselfe to be known No hope of life to come but by knowing the things revealed concerning God as that he gives us no hope of another life by any other means Yea those beginnings whatsoever they are doe with so great a distance surpasse all humane wisedome that there is no comparison between it and them for these rudimennts which to reason are hidden wisdome are both necessary and sufficient to everlasting salvation Let us therefore not onely acknowledge our infancy but desire also to be of the number of sucking babes For as the babe growes not to ripenesse of man-hood unlesse he be fed with the mothers milk or convenient food so we likewise that we may not fail of our hoped perfection 1 Pet. 1.1 2. ought not to refuse the milk of the Word whereby we are nourished and suckled to eternall life This is that spirituall infancy well pleasing to the Lord as Christ witnesseth rebuking the Pharisees disdain of the childrens cry in the Temple Hosanna to the Son of David These are those infants in whose voice the Lord will be effectuall By whose mouthes as the Psalmist addeth hee perfecteth strength Psal 8.2 Mollerus upon the 8. Psal v. 2. A description of the kingdom of Christ or as they translate who weigh the originall foundeth a kingdome Hee speaketh of the strength or kingdome which is seen in this life called the kingdome of Christ which is the Son of God instituting and preserving of a ministery thereby gathering a Church quickning beleevers by the sound of the Gospel and sanctifying them by the holy Spirit to eternall life defending the Church in this life against the kingdome of the Divell and after this life raising them up holy to eternall life that in them may reign the Godhead evidently and not covertly by the ministery The foundation of Christs kingdome is Christ and how many waies That which is the foundation of this kingdome St. Paul declares 1 Cor. 3.11 Other foundation can no man lay than that is laid which is Jesus Christ Christ is the foundation first in his proper person Because all the members of his kingdom namely the Saints being conjoyned and inserted into him doth he carry about him keeping and holding them together as the foundation doth the other parts of the building as the vine doth its branches Then again by his doctrine For as good laws are the sinews of a politicall-kingdom so this kingdom is gathered kept and governed by the doctrine concerning Christ And as without a foundation the building cannot consist Phil. 3.8 so unlesse we hold to Christ and what he is and what he hath done for us whatsoever else may seem to be piety or comfort it 's fading it 's 〈…〉 nothing This foundation is laid in the mouths of infants when they beleeving this same doctrine upon their hearing of it do by the incitement of the holy Spirit learne and imbrace the same and thereby are ingraffed and grow into one with Christ In this businesse of maine importance God useth our infancy to illustrate his glory The greatnes of the work Why God useth weake means for the conversion of them and weaknes of the instrument plainly proving that so great a matter is not effected or dependent by and on our but Gods effectuall power Also to the end it might blunt the insolencie of his adversaries when as their lofty power is subdued under our weaknes and our seeming folly evinceth that nothing is more foolish than their wisdom As it is said In silence and hope shall be your strength For the Son of God destroyeth the works of the Divel snatching from him them that beleeve remitting their sin and taking it away and beginning in them eternall life defending the Church accusing and laying open the malice of the enemies repressing and punishing them both in this present life and at the full deliverance of the Church from all
Scripture lest those things should be thrust upon us under his name which are not his Further 6 The Church doth not erre Matth 18.19 they make their boast that the Church cannot erre and that therefore the decrees of the Church are of equall authority with the holy Scripture because the Church is ruled by the same spirit by which the Scripture is inspired even as it is promised If two of you shall agree in earth upon any thing whatsoever they shall desire it shall be given them of my Father which is in heaven For where two or three are gathered in my name there am I in the midst of them And I am with you alway unto the end of the world Matthew 28.20 1 John 2.20 27. So Yee have an ointment from him that is holy and ye know all things Likewise The annointing which ye received of him dwelleth in you and yee need not that any man teach you but as the same annointing teacheth you of all things and it is true and is not lying and as it taught you yee shall abide in him But first of all wee know 1 Answer The true Church Matth. 13. Marke 4. Luke 8. that it is the true Church onely which erreth not and is ruled by the holy Spirit which is gathered in the name of Christ that is which heareth and followeth the voice of the Sonne of God And therefore these things doe nothing appertaine to a wicked multitude which openly maintaineth doctrine contrary to the Gospel though it never so much vaunt of the Churches name yea and beareth sway and rule in the Church according to that which is said To him that hath shall be given but from him that hath not even that which hee seemeth to have shall be taken away So did the Pharisees and Sadducees among the Israelites erre not knowing the Scriptures neither were they the true Church though they seised upon the name and place of it 2. The true Church indeed erreth not universally For alwaies the light of the truth 2 Answer Universally especially concerning the foundation of doctrine is preserved in some mens mindes whereupon the Church is called the pillar and ground of truth But yet neverthelesse some of the godly oftentimes fall into errours through ignorance and infirmity yet so that they hold the foundation neither do they defend their erroneous opinions contrary to their conscience and at length they forsake them even as it is said 1 Corinth 3. If any man build upon this foundation gold silver c. And If ye be otherwise minded Ephes 4. God shal reveal even the same unto you Last of all There is given unto every man grace 1 Corinth 12. according to the measure of the gift of Christ And The Spirit distributeth to every man severally as hee will Philip. 3.15 The Apostles before they had received the holy Ghost at Whitsontide were the lively members of the Church yet erred they concerning the kingdome and office of the Messias There were of the Chiliasts opinion great men in the Church as Papyas Irenaeus Apollinarius Tertullian Victorinus Lactantius Methodius Martyr And therefore although the Church erre not universally yet oftentimes some of her members erre when as they swerve from the word which God suffereth not seldome to happen unto them for to keep us being warned of our weaknesse and blindnesse in modesty and his true feare and in daily invocating of him and withall to teach us that the truth of doctrine is not to be measured by the title of the Church but by the word delivered of him by the hands of the Prophets and Apostles as it is said Thy word O Lord Psamle 129. is a lanterne unto my feet and a light unto my paths Likewise 1 Tim. 6.20 Keep that which is committed unto thee and avoid profane and vain babblings This ground being once laid that so farre forth the Church erreth not 7 Object The Church ought to obey Bishops by the commandement of God Acts 20.28 Marthew 18.7 Luke 10.16 Heb. 13.17 as it doth not swerve from the written word of God it is easie to answer to that which they make shew of to the contrary That the Church is ruled by Bishops and therefore must obey them as it is said Take heed unto all the flocke whereof the holy Ghost hath made you over-seers to governe the Church of God And If hee refuse to heare the Church let him be unto thee as an Heathen man and a Publican Hee that heareth you heareth mee and hee that despiseth you despiseth me And Obey those who bear rule over you For both they must rule and the Church must obey them according unto the prescript of Gods word as it is said If any man preach any other doctrine let him be accursed Galatians 1.9 Answer Necessarily in those things which belong to the Ministry freely in traditions Mat. 23.2 Whatsoever therefore the Ministers propound of the word of God unto the Church we must of necessity obey it that which the Lord teacheth when hee saith The Scribes and Pharisees sit in Moses chaire All therefore whatsoever they bid you observe that observe and doe For they sit in Moses chaire who teach Moses doctrine in the Church If also they ordaine any things indifferent and of a middle sort which are profitable these also are observed for maintaining of order and avoiding of offence But if they require us to beleeve or observe things repugnant to the word of God or things that are in their owne nature indifferent with putting an opinion of necessity in them and of worshipping of God they sit no longer in Moses chaire but in the chaire of scorners and of them it is said John 10. ● 1 Tim. 4.1 The sheepe heard them not Likewise In the latter times some shall depart from the faith and shall give heed unto the spirits of errour And that the decrees of the Bishops also are not to be received among the precepts and decrees of the Church is confirmed by the example of the civill Magistrate whose just and good lawes binde the consciences of the subjects For the dissimilitude of the examples consisteth in that 1 Instance The Magistrate doth bind the conscience therefore Bishops that God himselfe by expresse word hath decreed a necessity of obedience to the Lawes and Commandements of the civill Magistrate which are not repugnant unto his Law but hath given a libertie of conscience in traditions of the Church so that hee pronounceth himselfe to be angry with him who obeyeth not civill Magistrates as long as they command nothing repugnant to his Lawes but not with them which without offence do contrary to the constitutions of Bishops For of the Magistrate is is said Rom. 13.5 Wee must obey him for conscience sake But of things indifferent in the Church Col. 2.26 Let no man condemne you in me at or drink or in respect of a holy
of all urge but coldly because they are destitute of true vertues A good conscience A good conscience which is not really and truly but in the godly who perfectly know that God is at peace with them by and through Christ the Mediator Now if God be favourable and gracious unto us we cannot but enjoy tranquillity and quietnesse of mind The Philosophers comfort not theirs on this manner for the Philosopher being once afflicted thinketh Why doth not good fortune follow a good conscience and therefore he murmureth against God and fretteth as did Cato and others The finall causes or their afflictions 1 Cor. 2.32 Act. 5.41 The finall causes which are 1. Gods glory which shineth in our delivery 2. Our salvation for We are chastened of the Lord because we should not be condemned with the world 3. The conversion of others and the enlarging of the Church For this cause the Apostles rejoyced that they were counted worthy to suffer rebuke for Christs name namely the conversion of others and strengthening of many in the faith The Philosophers say It is a good end for which thou sufferest that thou maist save thy Country and attain unto everlasting renown and glory But yet in the mean season wretched man he thinketh What will these things profit me when my selfe perish The comparing of ends ●●ents The conference and comparing together of events It is better for a short time to be chastised of the Lord then to live in plenty and abundance of all things and to be pulled from God and to run into everlasting perdition The Philosophers conferring and comparing evils together find but little good arising out of so many evils but the principall good for the obtaining whereof we ought to suffer whatsoever evils they are wholly ignorant of The hope of recompence Mat. 5 12. The hope of recompence or reward in this and another life Your reward is great in heaven Wee know that there remaine other blessings for us after this life nothing to be compared with the moment any afflictions of this present world Even in this life also the god●y receive greater blessings then other men for they have God pacified and pleased with them and other spirituall gifts Corporall blessings though they be small Mar. 10. ●9 30. yet are they profitable for their salvation There is no man that hath for saken house or c. but he shall receive an hundred fold now at this present and in the world to come eternall life Psal 37.17 Rom. 5.3 John 15.20 Phil. 2.5 2 Cor. 8.9 A small thing that the righteous hath is better then great riches of the ungodly We rejoyce in affections c. A recompence in small evils doth in some sort comfort the Philosophers but in great evils not at all because they think that they had rather want that recompence then buy it so dear because it is but uncertain small and transitory The example of Christ and his Saints who have suffered before us The example of Christ and his saints The servant is not greater then his Master And God will have us to be made like to the image of his Son Let us accompany therefore Christ in ignominy and glory This the thankfulnesse which we owe requireth because Christ died for our salvation Holy and godly Martyrs have suffered and have not perished in afflictions Wee are not to challenge any peculiar estate unto our selves or better then theirs sith that we are not better then they but much worse They have endured the crosse and have been preserved by God amidst their afflictions let us then expect the like event because the love of God towards his is immutable and knoweth no change Matth. 5.12 1 Pet. 5.9 So did they persecute the prophets which have been before you Resist stedfast in the faith knowing that the same afflictions are accomplished in your brethren which are in the world The certaine presence assistance of God The presence and assistance of God in afflictions God is present with us by his Spirit strengthening us and comforting us in our crosse not suffering us to be tempted above that wee are able but even giving the issue with the tentation and alwaies poising in equall balance and proportion the affliction and our power that thereby wee may be able to endure unto the end We have the first fruits of the Spirit Rom. 8.23 Psal 91.15 Joh. 14.16 18 23. Isa 49.15 I am with him in tribulation He shall give you another Comforter that he may abide with you for ever I and my Father will come unto him and dwell with him I will not leave you comfortlesse Can a woman forget her childe and not have compassion on the son of her womb Though she should forget yet will I not forget thee The finall and full delivery The finall and full delivery is the period of all the rest The first is the ground and principall but this is the end and consummation for as of punishments so also of delivery there are three degrees 1. In this life where we have the beginning of eternall life 2. In our bodily death when the soul of poor Lazarus is carried into Abrahams bosome 3. In the resurrection of the dead and their glorification after the resurrection when we shall be both in body and soul perfectly blessed Then shall God wipe away all tears from their eyes Wherefore as the first consolation is the foundation and beginning so this last is the finishing and accomplishment of all the rest THE SECOND PART OF MANS DELIVERY ON THE 5. SABBATH Quest 12. Seeing then by the just judgement of God we are subject both to temporall and eternall punishments is there yet any means or way remaining whereby we may be delivered from these punishments and be reconciled to God Ans God will have his justice satisfied a Gen. 3.37 Exod. 20.5 23.7 Ezek. 18.4 Matth. 5.26 2 Thess 1.6 Luke 16 2. Rom. 8.3 wherefore it is necessary that we satisfie either by our selves or by another The Explication AFter it hath been shewed in the first Part that men are become obnoxious unto everlasting pains and punishments by reason of obedience not yeelded unto the Law a question by and by ariseth Whether there is or may be granted any escape or delivery from these punishments To this question the Catechism maketh answer that delivery is granted so that perfect satisfaction be made unto the law and justice of God by sufficient punishment paid for the sins committed for the law bindeth either to obedience or that being not performed to punishment the performance of both which is perfect righteousnesse and justice and on both followeth the approbation and allowing of him in whom that righteousnesse is Now the means and manner of satisfaction by punishments are two One by our selves which the law teacheth and the justice of God requireth Legall satisfaction Galat. 3.10 Evangelicall satisfaction
required therefore that our Mediatour should pay a sufficient punishment for us and in regard hereof be armed with the power of the God-head for the divels themselves are not able to sustain the weight of Gods wrath against sin much lesse should man be able to do it Repl. But all the divels and wicked men bear and sustain and are constrained to bear and sustain the everlasting wrath of God Ans They indeed bear the immeasurable wrath of God Wicked men and divels satisfie in never satisfying but so that they never satisfie Gods justice neither recover out of punishment for their punishment is extended to all eternity But it beseemed the Mediatour so to bear the burthen of Gods wrath that after he had satisfied for our sins he might shake off that burthen and take it away both from himself and from us Because of revealing Gods will unto us Our Mediatour must be God That he might reveal and make known unto us the secret will of God concerning the redemption of mankind whereof except he were God he could have no knowledge For no creature could at any time have searched out the bottomlesse depth thereof and conceived so intricate a mystery had not the Son of God displayed and laid it open unto us No man hath seen God at any time John 1.18 the onely begotten Son which is in the bosome of the Father he hath declared him Because of giving the Spirit Our Mediatour must be God That he may give the holy Ghost by whom he may gather in one his Church be present with it in the world and bestow on us maintain and perfect in us the benefits purchased by his death remission of sins righteousnesse new obedience and life everlasting For it is not sufficient for our Mediatour to be made a sacrifice for us to break the bonds of death and make intercession with God for us but it is necessary also that he promise on our behalf that we shall imbrace the decree concerning our redemption by our Mediatour and cease at length to offend God through our sins which is the other part of the Covenant made between God and us and is performed by us that the Covenant may remain firme and ratified But this by reason of our corruption could be promised of no man in our behalfe except he have the power also of giving the holy Ghost by whom he might work in us to assent and to be more and more conformed to the image of God Now to give the holy Ghost and by him to regenerate our hearts and work forcibly in us faith conversion and salvation belongeth to God alone whose also is the Spirit Whom I will send you from the Father John 15.26 For only the Lord of nature is able to reforme nature Jerem. 23.6 Lastly it behooved the Messias to be the Lord our righteousnesse Object The party offended cannot be Mediatour Christ is the Mediatour Therefore he cannot be the party offended that is God Ans The Major proposition is true if the party offended be such a one as in whom there are not more persons But a most cleer testimony whereby are taught in few words those three former to wit that the mediatour is both true man Acts 20.28 and perfectly just and true God is extant when it is said God hath purchased the Church with his bloud for he is true man who sheddeth his own bloud Hee is perfectly just who sheddeth it for the redemption of others Hee is true God to whom both the name and properties of true God are given which is to be a Redeemer both by his merit and also by his efficacy and power and that of the Church that is the elect and chosen Quest 18. And who is that Mediatour which is together both very God a 1 Joh. 5.20 Rom. 9.5 Gal. 4.4 Isa 9.6 Jer. 23.6 Mal. 3.1 and a very b Luke 1.24 2.6 7. Rom. 1.3 9.5 Phil. 2.7 Heb. 2.14 16 17. 4.15 perfectly just man c Isa 53.9 11. Jer. 23.5 Luke 1.35 Joh. 8.46 Heb. 4.15 7.26 1 Pet. 1.19 2.22 3.18 Ans Even our Lord Jesus Christ d 1 Tim. 2.5 3.16 Ma●th 1.23 Heb. 2.9 Luke 2.11 who is made to us of God wisdome righteousnesse sanctification and redemption e 1 Cor. 1.30 The Explication WHat kind of Mediatour is necessary for us hath already been declared The Mediatour was to be God yet not the Father nor the H. Ghost but the Son only Eight reasons hereof Now the question is of the person who is such a Mediatour This Mediatour therefore is Jesus Christ alone the Sonne of God manifested in the flesh which position is proved by these reasons 1. Our Mediatour must be true God as heretofore hath been evidently shewed But God the Father could not be Mediatour because he worketh not by himsefe and immediatly but mediatly by the Son and the holy Ghost Neither is he the messenger because he is sent of none but he sendeth the Mediatour Neither yet could God the holy Ghost be Mediatour because he was to be sent of the Mediatour into the hearts of the elect therefore necessarily the Son and he only was to be our Mediator 2. That which our Mediatour should impart unto us he must needs first have it himself But it belonged unto him to confer and bestow on us the right and title of the sons of God whence we were fallen that is to work that through him we might be adopted of God to be his sons because this was in his power alone sith he alone had the sole claim and interest herein For the holy Ghost had it not because he is not the Son neither had God the Father it because he also is not the Son and was to adopt us by his Son to be his sons The Word therefore only which is that naturall Son of God is our Mediatour in whom as in the first begotten of God we are adopted to be the sons of God John S. 36. John 1.12 as it is said If the Son shall make you free ye shall be free indeed As many as received him to them he gave power to become the sons of God Who hath predestinate to be adopted through Jesus Christ unto himselfe Ephes 1.5 6. With his grace he hath made us accepted in his beloved 3. The Son alone is the Word his Fathers embassador and delegate and that person which is sent unto mankind by whom the Father openeth his will by whom he worketh and giveth his holy Spirit by whom also is made the second creation for by the Son we are made new creatures Therefore the Scripture joyneth every where the first creation with the second John 1.3.2 Cor. 5.17 Gal. 6.15 Ephes 2.10 Col. 1.16 Heb. 1.10 because the second creation was to be made by the same party by whom the first was wrought By the Son were made all things But this was
proper to the Mediatour to be a messenger and truce-man between God and us and to regenerate us by his Spirit Therefore only the Son must be this Mediatour 4. It belongeth unto the Mediatour immediatly to send the holy Ghost But the Son alone immediatly sendeth the holy Ghost The Father also indeed sendeth the holy Ghost but mediately by the Sonne the Sonne immediately from the Father as himselfe testifieth whom I will send unto you from the Father John 15.26 5. It belongeth to the Mediatour to suffer and die for us But the Sonne only is he who taking our flesh on him hath suffered in it and died God is manifested in the flesh c. 1 Tim. 3.16 1 Pet. 3.18 Christ was put to death concerning the flesh c. Therefore hee only is the Mediatour 6. That the Son is the Mediatour is proved by conference of revelations and prophesies in the old Testament and by the fulfilling of the same in the new 7. The same is proved by the works and miracles which Christ wrought John 5.36 John 7.31 John 10.38 Matth. 11.4 5. The works that I do bear witnesse of mee that the Father sent mee When Christ cometh will hee doe moe miracles then this man hath done Beleeve my works Goe and shew John what things yee have heard and seen the blind receive sight c. 8. By testimonies of Scripture There is one Mediatour between God and man which is the man Christ Jesus 1 Tim. 2.5 1 Cor. 1.30 Christ Jesus of God is made unto us wisdome and righteousnesse and sanctification and redemption that is to say he is made unto us a teacher of wisdome a Justifier and Sanctifier and Redeemer to wit a Mediatour and Saviour in full merit and efficacy For in this speech of the Apostle the Abstracts wisdome justification sanctification and redemption are put for the Concretes a teacher of wisdome a Justifier a Sanctifier a Redeemer In this sentence of the Apostle that is worthy observation whereas hee saith that the Mediatour was made unto us of God he meaneth was appointed and given The Mediatour was given us by God A Mediatour should have been given unto us and proceeded from us because we were the offenders But we were unable to supply any from amongst our selves because we were all the sons of wrath Wherefore it was necessary that a Mediatour should be given us of God Here we are to note farther that justice or righteousnesse and sanctity or holinesse in us before the fall were one and the same thing to wit an inherent conformity in us with God and the law as at this day in the holy Angels they are one and the same But now since the fall they continue no longer the same in us For now Christ is our righteousnesse How justification and sanctification and justice sanctity are now since the fall different and diverse in us and our justification is the imputation of Christs righteousnesse whereby we are accounted righteous before God Holinesse also is our inchoative or new begun conformity with God and sanctification is the working of a conformity with God in us which is here imperfect and shall be perfected in the life to come where holinesse and righteousnesse shall be again one and the same even in us Now followeth a brief recapitulation of the whole doctrine touching the Mediatour OF THE MEDIATOUR The causes why this doctrine of the Mediatour is to be in the Church THe doctrine touching the Mediatour whereas it so neerly concerneth Gods glory and our comfort is to be held and diligently considered for these causes 1. That we may acknowledge and magnifie the mercy and goodnesse of God towards us in that he hath given us his Son to be our Mediatour and to be made a sacrifice for our sins 2. That we may know that God is just and doth not of any lenity pardon sins but is so grievously offended therewith that he granteth no pardon to them except the satisfaction of his Son mediate and come between 3. That wee enjoying such a Mediatour may be assured of eternall life because this our Mediatour is both willing and able to grant it 4. Because it is the foundation and short summe of Christian doctrine 5. Because of Hereticks who at all times most grievously oppugne this doctrine that against them we may be able to defend it The doctrine concerning the Mediatour seemeth to belong to the place of Justification because there also the office of the Mediator is declared But it is one thing to teach What and what manner of benefit the benefit of justification is and how it is received which is performed in the common place touching Justification another thing to shew whose that benefit is and by whom it is bestowed which is proper to this present place here handled and these are different and diverse propositions Justification belongeth to the Mediatour or is wrought by the Mediatour and remission of sins is our justification In the former proposition Justication is the subject that is it is that whereof another thing is affirmed in the latter it is the Attribute or Predicate that is justification it self is affirmed of another thing even of remission of sins The principall Questions touching the Mediatour are these 1. What in generall a Mediatour is 2. Whether wee need any Mediatour with God for us 3. What his office is 4. What manner of one is necessary 5. Who or what person is or may be our Mediatour 6. Whether there may be moe Mediatours 1 What a Mediatour is What a mediator 〈◊〉 in generall A Mediatour in generall signifieth him who reconcileth two parties at variance by interposing himselfe and mitigating the offence or appeasing the offended by intreatie satisfaction and caution lest the like offence be again occasioned and committed To reconcile hath four parts For to reconcile is 1 To make intercession for him who offendeth unto him who is offended 2 To make satisfaction for the injury offered 3 To promise and to bring to passe that the party who hath offended offend no more For except this be brought to passe and effectuated the fruit and commodity of the intercession is lost 4 To bring them to an attonement and agreement who were before at enmity If one of these conditions be wanting A Mediatour in speciall there cannot be any true reconcilement But in speciall and as here it is used and meant of Christ A Mediatour is a person reconciling God who is offended and angry with sin and mankinde offending and subject to eternall death for the same and that by the satisfying of Gods justice by his death by praying and intreating for the guilty and by applying forcibly and effectually his merit through faith on them that beleeve and regenerating them by his holy Spirit effecting that they cease from sinning and lastly hearing their grones and petitions when they call on him Or A Mediatour is a
these things 1. He presenteth himself unto us as his Fathers messenger and embassadour opening and shewing this decree of the Father that hee should give himself to be our Mediatour and that his Father accepteth of his satisfaction 2. He performeth this satisfaction and imputeth granteth and applieth it being performed unto us 3. He worketh faith in us by giving us his holy Spirit to agnise this so great a benefit and to imbrace and not to reject it for no reconcilement or amity can be between parties which are at variance Philip. 2.13 except both parties accord He worketh in us both to will and to do 4. He by the same Spirit causeth us to leave off to sin and to begin a new life 5. He preserveth maintaineth and shieldeth us in this reconcilement faith and obedience begun in us against the Divels and all enemies yea against our own selves lest we revolt again 6. He will raise us up again from the dead and glorifie us that is will perfect and finish our salvation which is begun with all the gifts both which we have lost in Adam and those which himself hath merited for us All these things Christ worketh accomplisheth and perfecteth not onely by his merit but also by the efficacy and powerfull operation of the same whence he is termed a Mediatour in regard both of merit Christ a Mediator both in merit and efficacy and efficacy of merit because he not only meriteth for us by his sacrifice but also by vertue of his Spirit doth effectually impart unto us his benefits righteousnesse and life everlasting witnesse those sayings John 10.15 28. 5.20 26. I lay down my life for my sheep I give unto them eternall life As the Father hath life in himself so likewise hath he given to the Son to have life in himselfe As the Father raiseth up the dead and quickeneth them so the Son quickeneth whom he will Without me ye can do nothing John 15.5 The benefits of the Mediatour Now when question is made of the office of the Mediatour question is made withall concerning his benefits For the office enjoyned of God unto the Mediatour is to bestow benefits on his Church which Paul summarily compriseth in these four generall heads as it were 1 Cor. 1.30 when he faith Ye are of him in Christ Jesus who of God is made unto us wisdome and righteousnesse and sanctification and redemption He is made unto us wisdome 1. Wisdome 1. Because he is the matter or subject of our wisdome I esteemed not to know any thing amongst you but Jesus Christ and him crucified We preach Christ crucified unto the Jews even a stumbling block 1 Cor. 2.2 1. Cor. 1.23 24. and unto the Grecians foolishnesse But unto them which are called both of Jews and Grecians we preach Christ the power of God and the wisdome of God 2. Because he is the cause or authour of our wisdome and that three wayes Christ the author of our wisdome three wayes 1. Because he hath brought forth out of the bosome of the eternall Father wisdom that is the doctrine of our redemption 2. Because he hath ordained and preserveth the ministery of his word by which he informeth us of his Fathers will and his office 3. Because he is forcible and effectuall in the hearts of the chosen and maketh them to yeeld their assent unto the word or doctrine and to be reformed by it according to his image Shorter thus Christ is called our wisdome because he is 1. The subject 2. The authour 3. The means of our wisdom He is made unto us righteousnesse 2. Righteousness that is our justifier for in him our righteousnesse is as in the subject and is made ours by his merit and forcible operation For 1. He suffered the punishment of our sins which is justice and righteousnesse and the merit for which we are reputed just and righteous 2. He by his power maketh us righteous in the sight of God by imputing unto us his righteousnesse and by giving us faith whereby our selves also receiving it 3. Sanctification may apply it unto us He is made unto us sanctification that is our sanctifier because he doth regenerate and sanctifie us by his holy Spirit He is made unto us redemption 4. Redemption that is our redeemer because he finally delivereth us for the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which we interpret redemption doth not only signifie the price but also the effect and full complement thereof 4. What manner of Mediatour ours ought to be THis question hath good and orderly dependance of the former for whereas it appeareth 1. That we must satisfie 2. That we must satisfie by another 3. That we must satisfie with that satisfaction of our Mediatour which hath already been discoursed of and described at large It is well demanded next 4. What manner of Mediatour is required Our Mediatour therefore must be 1. Man 2. True man deriving his nature of our kind and retaining it for ever 3. A man perfectly just 4. True God In a word hee must be such a person as is God and man having both natures divine and humane in the unity of his person so that he may be truly middle and Mediatour between God and men Now the demonstrations and proofs concerning the person of the Mediatour are drawn from his office for because such is his office himself also ought to be such a one They have been already handled in the Explication of the 15 16 17 18. Questions of the Catechisme where they may be reviewed 5. Who is this Mediatour God and man Three things in the person of the Mediatour HItherto the Mediatour hath been described to be the very Sonne of God our Lord Jesus Christ as hath been lively expressed before in the Explication of the eighteenth Question of this Catechism the summe is that the Scripture ascribeth to one Christ and him only these three things 1. That he is God The Word was God All things were made by it God purchased the Church with his bloud Who was John 1.2 3. Acts 20.28 Rom. 1.4 10.11 1 John 5.7 declared mightily to be the Son of God touching the spirit of sanctification Whosoever beleeveth in him shall not be ashamed There are three which bear record in heaven the Father the Word and the holy Ghost and these three are one To these also are to be added those places in which is attributed to Christ divine worship invocation hearing of our prayers and works proper to God alone In like manner those which attribute unto Christ the name of Jehovah Likewise those in which those things which are spoken of Jehovah are applied to Christ 2. That he is true man Hitherto belong those places which call Christ man and the son of man the son of David Jerem. 23.6 Zech. 2.10 Malac. 3.1 Isa 9.6 John 12.40 1 Tim. 2.5 Mat. 9.6 16.13 Matth. 1.1 Luke
sharp and bitter one thereby to recall him from making his expedition to war and to punish him for not obeying by delivering him to be seduced by the divell the false Prophets fore-told victory to flatter him the divell to destroy him and to die Why chastity is one of Gods properties Chaste There is made also mention of Chastity in the former description of God because amongst his especiall and most notable differences whereby he may be discerned from divels he will have truth to be and chastity for as God will be acknowledged to be true and will have truth loved of us that it may certainly appear that hee is and what he is and that men may think and speak the truth of him and through his knowledge be partakers of everlasting life so the divell attempteth to fill the world with lies that hee may both darken the glory of God and by forging lies of God destroy mankind Whereupon the holy Ghost is called the Spirit of truth John 8.44 but the divell a lyar and murtherer from the beginning and the father of lyes And as God both by reason of the exceeding purity of his nature Ephes 5.23 Ezek. 16. Hos 2. as also because hee will have the spousall love and conjunction of marriage to be the image of the unspeakable love and spirituall conjunction between him and the Church will therefore have it accounted sacred and holy amongst men and as in these respects hee is the lover and author of chastity and doth most severely detest and punish all uncleannesse both internall and externall which is repugnant to this order as the examples of the Sodomites of the tribe of Benjamin and others of all other ages and nations testifie So the divell both for his impurity and also because whatsoever God would have held most holy and venerable that for the hatred he beareth to God hee studieth most to deprave and most foulely to deform endeavoureth with obscenity and filthinesse horribly to pollute mankind and to withdraw them from God Therefore it is said This is the will of God even your sanctification 1 Thess 4.3 4. and that you should abstain from fornication that every one of you should know how to possesse his vessell in holinesse and honour Arguments of the mercy of God in preserving his creatures Mercifull The mercy or favour and inclinable will of God to preserve his creature and especially mankinde the Scripture proposeth unto us opened by these degrees 1. That hee taketh delight in the salvation of all but in the destruction of none As I live saith the Lord God I desire not the death of the wicked but that the wicked turn from his way and live 2. That he deferreth mitigateth Ezek. 33. and taketh away punishments inviting all men by his long-suffering to repentance if not one way yet by the testimony of their conscience hereof hee is said to be slow to anger Exod. 35.6 3. That he debaseth himself to relieve our infirmity both by inward and outward supplies as by his Spirit word oathes sacraments and miracles 4. That hee imbraceth with singular love his chosen so that hee saveth and delivereth them for ever from sin and all evils and comforteth them also in afflictions Repl. God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes Rev. 7.17 21.4 Isa 49.15 Though a woman should forget her child yet will I not forget thee 5. That he chose rather to bring to passe this our delivery even by the incarnation and death of his only begotten Son then that all mankind should perish So God loved the world John 3.16 that he gave his only begotten Son 6. That he promiseth and performeth all these things of his own free goodnesse I will shew mercy to whom I will shew mercy Exod. 33.19 Isa 43.25 and I will have compassion on whom I will have compassion I even I am he that putteth away thine iniquities for mine owne sake and will not remember thy sins 7. That hee doth these things towards sinners who not onely were unworthy of them Rom. 5.10 but also who are his deadly enemies When wee were enemies we were reconciled unto God by the death of his Son They also of the wiser sort which are out of the Church are compelled to attribute mercy unto God because they see him so mercifully to spare sinners ●am 3.22 whereupon Jeremie saith It is the Lords mercie that we are not consumed because his compassions faile not But because the perfectnesse of Gods justice and the privity of their own sins doth not permit them to conceive any firm perswasion of Gods mercy towards them neither know they ought concerning the salvation of men by the death of his Son therefore are they not able either constantly or wholly to agnise Gods mercy Object 1. Mercy is a kinde of griefe or sorrow Therefore there is sorrow and griefe in God Answ The names of affections when they are attributed unto God by an Anthropopathy they do not signifie any passion or change in God but an unspeakable either dislike or liking of the objects God therefore is said to be mercifull 1. Because he is against the destruction of his creature 2. Because he doth those things which mercifull men are wont to do Isa 1.24 Prov. 1.26 Object 2. God seemeth sometimes to rejoyce in revengement Ans He rejoyceth not in the revengement or punishment but in the executing of his own justice Isa 27.11 Object 3. It seemeth in some places of Scripture that Gods mercy doth not extend it selfe unto the wicked Ans This is to be understood of that degree of mercy wherewith he imbraceth his chosen And yet he spareth also the wicked neither rejoyceth at their destruction Object 4. But yet he saveth not all whereas hee is able to doe it Therefore he is not exceeding mercifull neither mercifull towards all Answ He doth not save all for most just cause for his mercy is so to be exercised that it hinder not the execution of his justice Object 5. He doth not take mercy on any or receive any into favour without the satisfaction of his Son Therefore hee doth it not freely Answ That which is concluded doth not follow because God of his free grace giveth this satisfaction it selfe and applyeth it unto us Now hee giveth a thing freely who giveth the price of a thing for which the thing it selfe is given In what the boundtifulnesse of God is seen Bountifull God is also called bountifull 1. Because hee createth and governeth all things 2. He is the only fountain of all good things 3. which befall to all creatures 4. Yea to the wicked 5. Of his goodnesse love and free mercy towards all creatures 6. But especially towards mankind which he hath made according to his image and for whose sake he hath created all other things 7. But in them also chiefly towards his Church to whom hee hath opened himself
Person no separate thing from the essence That the persons are not any thing separated from the essence which is common unto them nor the essence is any fourth thing separate from the three persons but each of them are the very selfe same whole essence of the Divinity But the difference is this that the persons are each distinct from the other but the essence is common to them three And that the person is no other thing subsisting or other substance then the essence may be understood in some sort by the example of a man One and the same man or one and the same substance is a father and a man or a son and a man and yet the manhood or to be a man is one thing the fatherhood or to be a father another but there is not one subsistent which is the father and another subsistent which is a man but one and the same subsistent is both because both manhood and fatherhood is in him manhood absolutely fatherhood respectively as in regard of his son What reference essence hath unto person Of the word Essence also it is further to be noted that God or the Deity or divine essence is not in respect of the persons the same which the matter in respect of the effect because God is unchangeable neither is compounded of matter and form Therefore we cannot say well Three persons are or consist of one essence Neither is it as the whole in respect of the parts because God is indivisible Wherefore it is not well said that the person is a part of the essence or the essence consisteth of three persons for every person is the whole divine essence one and the same Neither is it as the generall to the speciall because essence is not the generall to the three persons nor person a speciall to essence But God is a more common name because the essence of the Deity is common to the three persons and therefore may be affirmed of each of them But these names Father Son and holy Ghost are more strict because the persons are indeed distinct and cannot be affirmed the one of the other Therefore it is well said God or the divine Essence is the Father is the Son is the holy Ghost Likewise The three persons are one God or in one God Again They are one and the same essence nature divinity wisdome c. They are of one and the same essence nature divinity c. Yet it cannot be well said They are of one God because there is no one of these persons but is whole and perfect God Wherefore the divine essence is in respect of the persons as a thing after a rare and singular manner communicated in respect of those things unto which it is common For neither is there the like example of community in any created things For a generall is a certain thing common to many specials and a generall and speciall to many individuals but yet so that they are affirmed of those many plurally not singularly as that the father and the son or this father and son are two living creatures two men But we may not speak after this sort of God and the divine persons as to say The Father and the Son are two Gods two Spirits two Omnipotents c. Because there is but one God one Spirit one Omnipotent c. Wherefore that affirmation The Father is God the Son is God the holy Ghost is God is a true affirmation affirming that which is more common of a thing which is more restrict that is affirming the essence of the individuall which hath in some sort an analogy and proportion only with the speciall affirmed of his individuall but it is not at all the same nor of the same kind What the Trinity is By the name of Trinity are understood the three Persons distinct in one essence of the Deity by three manners of being or subsisting Now Trinity and Triplicity as also Trinall and Triple differ That is said to be Triple which is comprehended of three essences or is distinct by three essences Trinall is that which in essence is but one and most simple but hath three manners of being of subsisting God therefore is not triple because there are not more essences but Trinall because he being one according to his essence is three according to his persons 5. Whether these names are to be used in the Church HEreticks of ancient carped at these termes because they occurre not in Scripture But wee imitate aright the manner of speech which was usuall in the ancient and purer Church and by their authority and example retain these names 1. Because though they are not found extant in so many syllables yet phrases and speeches of neer affinity and likelihood yea and sometimes words and terms of the same signification which these are are read in Scripture For instance that of the Lords own mouth I am that I am Again I am hath sent mee unto you Again Exod. 3. ●● it cannot be denied but that the word Jehovah answereth to that wee call essence So the word Hypostasis is used to signifie a Person in the Epistle to the Hebrewes Who being the engraved form of his person Heb. 1.2 Neither doth the Church in any other sense call the persons the Trinity then as John saith that There are three which bear record in heaven the Father the Word and the holy Ghost 2. Because the course of interpretation requireth that the words of Scripture be expounded to the learned by such words as being more usuall in other languages or matters and doctrines are more easie for them to understand and paveth and maketh plain a way unto them for the understanding of the speech and phrase of Scripture Otherwise if no words were to be used but such as are extant in the Scriptures all interpretation should be taken away It is lawfull therefore that the Church invent and use words and phrases of speech whereby they may significantly expresse the sense of Scripture and their owne meaning 3. Because the sleights and sophisms of Hereticks which for the most part they go about to cloak and cover with the words of the holy Scripture are more easily espyed and taken heed of if the same things be expounded in divers words and those especially short perspicuous and significant For it cometh to passe that by reason of the pithinesse and plainnesse of these terms Hereticks are dismantled and can no longer shroud their sinister constructions and apparent corruptions Neverthelesse if there were a consent and agreement on the things wee should easily come to an agreement about the words for we detest contention brawling about words Neither is the Church at controversie with other Gentiles and Hereticks about bare terms but of this main substantiall doctrine That the eternall Father and the Son and the holy Ghost are one God and yet neither is the Father the Son or the holy Ghost nor the holy Ghost the
Father or the Son c. Now were it not that Hereticks cannot away with this doctrine they would easily admit of the phrases of speech But they therefore abandon the terms because they abhor the things and doctrine intimated and signified by them Hence we easily answer this their objection Obj. Words not extant in Scripture are not to be used in the Church But these names namely Essence Person and Trinity occurre not in Scripture therefore they may not be used in the Church Ans We expound the Major thus That which is not in Scripture neither concerning the bare words nor concerning the sense is be omitted But the names themselves of Essence Person and Trinity as concerning the things lively insinuated by them are extant in Scripture as hath been proved Again Terms not extant in Scripture are to be omitted if by sparing them the substance of the things themselves be not endangered But the drift and purpose of hereticks is no other but with the terms to abolish or at least deprave the doctrine of the Church Therefore they are to be retained to prevent their attempts Repl. But they breed contentions Answ This happeneth by accident by reason of contentious hereticks 6. How many persons there be of the Divinity or God-head Three persons are one God and one God is three persons IN one divine Essence are subsisting three Persons and those truly distinct one from another by their properties namely the Father the Son and the holy Ghost each of which three persons notwithstanding are one and the same God eternall infinite and most perfect in himselfe And these persons are consubstantiall co-eternall without any confounding of their properties and respects as also without any disparagement or inequality between them And That there are three persons each of which are that one true God Creatour of all things is proved 1. By testimonies of Scripture which are taken partly out of the old Testament and partly out of the new The old Testament yeeldeth us many testimonies Gen. 1.2 3. Exod. 3.2 The Spirit of the Lord moved upon the waters Then God said Let there be light The Lord is said to have appeared unto Moses in a flame of fire out of the midst of a bush Acts 7.30 Steven calleth him The Angel of the Lord which is Christ the Son of God even that Angel of the great counsell The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me Isa 61.1 therefore hath he anointed me he hath sent mee to preach good tidings unto the poor to binde up the broken hearted Here the Spirit is discerned both from him that anointeth and from him that is anointed Hee is discerned also by his gifts because hee saith Upon mee that is dwelling in me sanctifying mee Therefore these be three diverse persons subsisting But yet there are both moe and more cleer testimonies in the new Testament Mat. 28.19 Teach all nations baptising them in the Name of the Father and the Son and the holy Ghost The Comforter which is the holy Ghost John 14.26 John 15.27 whom the Father will send in my name When the Comforter shall come whom I will send unto you from the Father even the Spirit of truth which proceedeth of the Father The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ 2 Cor. 13.13 and the love of God and the communion of the holy Ghost be with you all In this saying of the Apostle invocation is joyned with an application and distinction of the three persons By grace he meaneth the benefits of Christ by love the acceptation whereby God for his Sons sake doth receive us into favour by the communion of the holy Ghost his gifts which are common unto the godly There are three in heaven which beare record God saved us by the washing of the new birth 1 John 5.7 T●t 3.5 6. and by the renewing of the holy Ghost which he shed on us abundantly through Jesus Christ our Saviour Here he maketh three authours of our salvation Ephes 2.18 Gal. 4.6 Through him wee have an entrance unto the Father by one Spirit God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son into our hearts Therefore it is one Spirit which the Father and the Son sendeth 2. The same is proved by those places of Scripture which give unto these three the Father the Son and the holy Ghost the name of Jehovah and the true God In like manner those places wherein those things which are spoken of Jehovah in the old Testament are in the new referred expresly and most plainly to the Son and the holy Ghost 3. Those places which attribute the same whole divine essence to the three and shew that the Son is the proper Son of the Father most truly begotten of him and the holy Ghost is the Spirit of the Father and the Son and that so proper and peculiar as that he is and proceedeth of God which is the Father and the Son The Son therefore and holy Ghost have the same and that whole essence of the Deity which the Father hath the Son hath it communicated of the Father by being born of him and the holy Ghost of the Father and the Son by proceeding from them 4. Those places which give unto the three the same attributes or properties and perfections of the divine nature namely eternity immensity omnipotency c. 5. Those places which attribute to the three the same effects or works proper unto the Deity namely creation preservation and government of the world as also miracles and the salvation of the Church 6. Those places which yeeld to the three equall honour and worship and such as agreeth to the true God alone By this consent therefore of the old and new Testament it is confirmed that one God is three persons truly distinct and those three persons are one God By this also we understand that it is truely said that the Father is other from the Son and the holy Ghost and the holy Ghost other from both but not truly that the Father is another thing from the Son and the Son another thing and the holy Ghost another thing for to be another thing betokeneth a diversity of essence to be other a diverse manner of existing or a distinction of persons Now the three distinct persons have not a diverse Deity but one and the same in number It followeth that we should demonstrate of each severall person of the Deity that they are true Subsistents against Samosatenus and Servetus that they are distinct against Arrius Eunomius and Macedonius lastly that they are of the same and not of only like essence against the same hereticks But of the person of the Father there is no controversie and these scruples and doubts touching the persons of the Son and holy Ghost shall more conveniently hereafter in their proper place be cleared 7. How the three persons of the God-head are distinguished HEre we are first to observe and consider Attributes common to
the whole three persons What the Scripture attributeth as common to the whole three persons Father Son and holy Ghost which three are one God and yet distinct in persons Effects in the creature common to the three persons What it ascribeth to each particular as peculiar unto him and how it distinguisheth and discerneth the persons Common to the three persons are 1. All the essentiall properties of God all which we comprehend in the name of Deity as eternity infinity omnipotency wisdome goodnesse to have essence from himself or to be God of himself 2. All externall actions and operations of the Divinity that is those effects which God exerciseth on his creatures and in them or by them such as are creation preservation the government of the world the gathering together and tuition of his Church c. The three persons distinguished two wayes 1. By inward works 2. By outward Of the inward operations of the three persons These persons are distinguished two wayes First by their inward works Secondly by their outward works or form of working without themselves The inward works or actions of the Divinity are those which the persons have and exercise one towards another The persons therefore are first distinguished between themselves by these inward operations or properties For The Father is and existeth of himselfe not from another Hee begot the Son and inspired the holy Ghost after an unspeakable manner The Son hath his being from the Father begotten of him from everlasting that is he hath the divine essence communicated unto him from the Father in such sort as no tongue can expresse The holy Ghost proceedeth from everlasting from the Father and the Son that is hath the same essence but communicated unto him from the Father and the Son in a manner which cannot be uttered Testimonies hereof are frequent In the beginning was the Word Joh. 1.1 14 18. and the Word was with God and God was the Word We have seen his glory as the glory of the only begotten Son of God The onely begotten Son which is in the bosome of his Father hee hath declared him When the Comforter shall come John 15.26 whom I will send unto you from the Father The order of the persons in subsisting The order therefore of the persons in subsisting is on this wise The Father is the first person and as it were the fountain of the Divinity of the Son and holy Ghost because the Deity is communicated unto him of none but he communicateth the Deity to the Son and holy Ghost The Son the second Person because the Deity is communicated unto him from the Father by an eternall generation The holy Ghost the third person because the Deity is communicated unto him from the Father and the Son by an everlasting inspiration in which order they are reckoned up unto us in these Scriptures Baptise all nations in the name of the Father Mat. 28.19 and the Son and the holy Ghost There are three which bear record in heaven the Father the Word and the holy Ghost and these three are one Yet is not the Father precedent in time before the Son and holy Ghost nor the Son before the holy Ghost but onely in the order of existing or working For no person of the Deity is former or later then another in time dignity or degree but only in that order whereby they issue and proceed one of the other For never was the Father without the Son nor the Son without the holy Ghost sith the Divinity is unchangeable So God from everlasting was subsistent in himself and so hee hath revealed himselfe in his word Here hereticks demand of us What that eternall generation of the Son Amb● de side ad Grat. lib. 1. cap. 5. Aug. cont Max. Arian l. 3. cap. 14. Damasc orth fid lib. 1. cap. 10. How everlasting generation and proceeding differ and proceeding of the holy Ghost meaneth and how they differ between themselves Which although we confesse as in former times also the catholick and right beleeving fathers confessed of themselves that it is not in mans ability to expresse perfectly the manner of this everlasting generation and proceeding and of the naturall distinction between them yet we gather the very thing it self from out of Scripture that Generation is a communicating of the divine essence whereby onely the second person of the Deity deriveth and taketh from the first person alone as a Son from his Father the same essence whole and entire which the Father hath and retaineth the same And Proceeding also is a communicating of the divine essence whereby the third person only of the God-head receiveth from the Father and the Son as the Spirit from him whose spirit it is the same whole essence which the Father and the Son have and retain Now both of them differ from Creation How generation proceeding differ from creation because To be created of God is when something is made of nothing at the commandement and will of God but To be conceived or begotten and To proceed or issue out is when some other person is begotten of the substance of him which begetteth and is in unexplicable wise produced from all eternity out of his substance from whom the proceeding springeth yet with this distinction that the Son hath his subsistence from being born the holy Ghost from proceeding Thus wee conceive the thing it selfe That thus it is as farre forth as God for his glory and our salvation hath thought meet to impart unto us so deep and hidden a mystery although wee cannot attaine to the cause Why thus it is Further of that Question so long controversed between the Greek and Latine Churches Whether the holy Ghost were truly said to proceed from the Father and the Son and not from the Father alone hereafter fit opportunity of handling the same will be offered us in the doctrine concerning the holy Ghost Orthodoxal phrases to be observed with their opposites to be avoyded in this mystery Here wee are to note the usuall proper phrases of Scripture and the ancient Church in this difference of the persons between themselves It is truely said God begate God but not truely God begate another God or begate himselfe True it is The Father begate another It is not true that hee begate another thing or another God True it is The Son is that which the Father is Untrue The Son is hee or the same person which the Father is True it is The Son is begotten The holy Ghost proceedeth from the Father And The Son is of or from out of the Father The holy Ghost is of or from out of the Father and the Son And Whatsoever the Son hath hee hath it from the Father and by eternall nativity or birth hath received it from the Father Whatsoever the holy Ghost hath hee hath it from the Father and the Son and receiveth it by proceeding And the Son and holy Ghost
and will of God and is profitable for us that we ought to bear patiently But all evils come to us by the counsell and will of God and are profitable for us Therefore we ought to bear all evils patiently Secondly That we may be thankefull for benefits received of God Thankfulnesse for Gods blessings wee ought to be thankfull because Of whom we receive all good things both corporall and spirituall great and small to him we ought to be thankfull and worship him But from God the authour of all good things we have all things Therefore wee ought to be thankfull unto God and to worship him Now thankefulnesse hath two parts 1. Truth to acknowledge his benefits and to be thankfull both in word and mind unto him 2. Justice to remunerate and recompence Or Thankefulnesse consisteth 1. In acknowledging of the benefit 2. In celebrating it 3. In remunerating it 3. Confidence of future blessings Thirdly That we may conceive a good hope and confidence of things to come when as God by his providence delivereth us out of evils He that hath decreed unchangeably to save and is able and will save beleevers doth never suffer them to perish Hope here signifieth such a hope as resolveth all things so to be governed of God as that also they shall hence-forward be profitable for our safety and that he will never suffer us to be pulled away or withdrawn from his love nor will ever so forsake us that wee perish Because his will and power in preserving and saving us is unchangeable and far above the forces of all his enemies Exercise of godlinesse The desire and studie of godlinesse prayers and labours because although God alone giveth all good things yet he giveth them with this rule and order that they be desired and expected from him and sought by our labour and study which must be guided by his word Briefly the ends of the doctrine of providence are 1. The glory of God 2. Our patience in adversity 3. Our thankfulnesse in prosperity 4. Our hope of things to come 5. Prayer for the obtaining of our hope All the grounds of religion shaken in pieces if the providence of God be denied By this it appeareth That all the grounds and foundations of godlinesse or religion are pulled a sunder if the providence of God be once denied such as before it hath been described out of the Scripture For 1. We shall never be patient in adversity except we know it to come from God our Father unto us 2. We shall never be thankfull for his benefits except we acknowledge them to be given us from above 3. We shall never have certain hope of our future delivery from all evill both of crime and pain to be perfected and accomplished except wee resolve that the will of God of certainly saving all the elect is unchangeable 4. Wee shall never with assured confidence crave of God his blessings promised us especially those which are necessary to salvation neither shall we strive thereto with right endeavours and agreeable to Gods word except we be assured that God both hath from everlasting decreed for us those blessings themselves and hath destined and appointed the means whereby they are received and doth also most certainly bestow those decreed and promised blessings upon all to whom he giveth those means and the lawfull use of them The second part of the Creed Of God the Son the Redeemer ON THE 11. SABBATH Quest 29. Why is the Son of God called Jesus that is a Saviour Ans Because he saveth us from all our sins a Mat. 1.21 Heb. 7.25 neither ought any safety to be sought for from any other nor can else-where be found b Acts 4.12 Job 15.4 1 Tim. 2.5 Isa 43.11 1 Job 5.11 The Explication IN this second part of the Apostolick Creed is treated of the Mediatour The doctrine concerning the Mediatour consisteth of two parts 1. Of the person of the Mediatour 2. Of his office Of his person the two former articles speak And in Jesus Christ his only Son our Lord which was conceived by the holy Ghost born of the virgin Mary His office is summarily expounded in the jame two articles but particularly in those which follow even the third part of the Creed wherein is treated concerning the holy Ghost There are two parts of his office humiliation or merit and glorification or efficacie Of his humiliation whereby Christ hath promerited for us his benefits namely remission of sins and reconciliation and attonement with God the holy Ghost and life everlasting these articles speak He suffered under Pontius Pilate was crucified dead buried descended into hell Of his glorification in respect whereof Christ is effectuall and worketh forcibly in us in applying his merited blessings and benefits unto us by his Spirit these articles speak The third day he rose again from the dead hee ascended into heaven sitteth on the right hand of God the Father almighty The seventh article touching his coming pertaineth to the consummation of his glorification when God shall be all in all From thence shall hee come to judge the quick and the dead The great wisdom order in disposing the articles of our Creed Hence it appeareth with how great wisdome the articles were written and applied to the question of the Mediatour For as it descendeth in order from the first to the last step and degree of Christs humiliation which is signified by his descension into hell and is the feeling of the horrible judgement and wrath of God against the sins of mankind so it ascendeth from the lesser glory which began from his resurrection to the highest and greatest which is betokened by his sitting at the right hand of God the Father The same order and the same wisdome is seen in the first part of the Creed It is also apparent in the third part which is as it were the fruit of the articles going before wherein are recited in most notable order the benefits which Christ promeriting by his passion applyeth to us by his Spirit Christs office and his benefits differ For the benefits of Christ are different from his office His benefits are the things themselves which Christ hath purchased for us and bestoweth on us to wit remission of sins or our reconciliation with God the giving of his holy Spirit and life everlasting His office is to promerit those things for us by his obedience and to bestow them on us by his own power and efficacy And in Jesus That is I beleeve in Jesus Christ We must repeat the words I beleeve because as we beleeve in God the Father so we also beleeve in the Son of God John 14.1 11. John 10.30 John 6.29 John 3.36 John 5.23 Ye beleeve in God beleeve also in me Beleeve me that I am in the Father and the Father in me I and my Father are one This is the work of God that ye beleeve in him whom he
hath sent He that beleeveth in the Son hath everlasting life That all men should honour the Son as they honour the Father This is a certain and invincible argument of the Deity of the Son for faith is a worship due only to God OF THE NAME JESVS But that it may be the better understood that by the name Jesus the office of the Sonne of God the Mediatour is designed these foure questions are to be considered 1. What is signified by the word Jesus 2. From what evils he saveth or delivereth 3. How hee saveth 4. Whom hee saveth 1. What the name Jesus signifieth THe question touching the name Jesus concerneth not so much the Etimologie and peculiar sense which this name importeth but especially respecteth the office of the Son of God therin implyed The word Jesus in Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mat. 1.21 and in Hebrew Jehoscuah or Jescuah signifieth a Saviour and Authour of safety which Name God himself gave unto the Mediatour 0166 0 in the new testament This true Etymon or original signification of this word is assigned by the Angel saying For he shall save his people from their sinnes Luke 1.31 The Son of God therefore is called Jesus in respect of his office by an excellencie 1. In that he is our Mediatour who saveth and delivereth from the evils both of crime and punishment 2. And that alone 3. Yea and most perfectly whether we respect the number of these evils hee delivereth us from them all or the degrees of them hee hath utterly annihilated the greatest yea and smallest portion of them And the salvation which he tendereth unto us is righteousnes and life everlasting Jesus is our Saviour This is gathered out of his very name because he hath not a bare title without the thing it selfe but farther therewith performeth and executeth the office of a Mediatour Object Many others were called by the Name Jesus and were Saviours of their People as for example Josuah the Captaine of Israel and divers other Therefore from this name it is not necessarily argued and inforced that Christ onely is our Saviour Answ Others had this name because they were typicall Saviours prefiguring and resembling this true Saviour Repl. Yea but the Parents of Josuah when they gave their young Infant this name could not so much as suspect that by him should come the delivery of the people of Israel Answ What then yet GOD knew and thereupon so directed their wils that they should call him Josuah Now there is a great difference between those other and this our Jesus Differences between the true Jesus our Saviuor and others of the same name 1. Others had this name imposed on them by the will of men this our Jesus had his name given him by an Angel 2. Others were but types and shaddowes this was the true prefigured Jesus 3. God by them bestowed onely corporall and temporall benefits upon his people the Israelites but by this Jesus he saveth all the chosen dispersed through the whole world from all evils both of body and soule from sin and death everlasting 4. they were only instruments and ministers by whom Christ gave safety and benefits temporall to the people Christ is the authour of all good things both temporall and eternall and these he by his own efficacy bestoweth on whom he will Thus the Son of God is called Jesus by an excellency above others being the true Saviour 1. Because he exempteth and freeth us from all evils of crime and paine 2. Because he alone worketh this freedome and delivery That the Sonne of God onely is that Saviour is shewed by the places of Scripture following There is no salvation in any other 2. Jesus alone is our Saviour Acts 4.12 John 3.18 1 John 5.11 1 Tim. 2.5 Esa 43.11 25. Rom. 5.19 How the whole three persons are said to be Saviours For among men there is given no other name under heaven whereby wee must be saved Hee that beleeveth not in the Sonne is condemned already because hee beleeveth not in the name of the onely begotten Son of God God hath given unto us eternall life and this life is in his Son There is one God and one Mediatour between God and man which is the man Christ Jesus I am the Lord and besides me there is no Saviour I am hee that putteth away thine iniquities for mine owne sake By the obedience of one shall many be made righteous Object The Father and the holy Ghost also are our Saviours Therefore not the Sonne alone Ans 1. It is a fallacy affirming that to be simply and wholly so which is but in some respect only so True it is they all save mankinde but the difference is in the manner of their saving For The Father by sending the Son The Father saveth as the fountaine of our delivery because he sendeth his Sonne into flesh by him to deliver us but the Father himselfe is not sent The holy Ghost by being sent of the Sonne The holy Ghost saveth as an immediate effector or worker of regeneration sent from the Father by the Sonne into the hearts of the chosen The Son only by ment and efficacy The Sonne saveth b● his merit and efficacy and thus becometh sole Mediatour paying the ransome giving the holy Ghost regenerating and raising us up unto life eternall Wherefore this efficacy and effectuall working it self is common to all three persons yet the order and manner of working is different and appropriate to each But the ransome the Sonne onley hath paid The particle alone executes all creatures from being Saviours 1. Cor. 2.11 Ans 2. The Sonne is called the onely Saviour in respect of the creature to whom he is opposed and from whom he is descerned that is from the word of salvation not the Father and the holy Ghost but the creatures onely are excluded For no creature delivereth from sin and death So it is said The things of God knoweth no man but the Spirit of God but it followeth not hereof that the Father and the Son know not themselves For the Spirit in that place is compared with the creature not with the Father and the Son 2. From what evils he saveth or delivereth HE delivereth us from all evils both of crime and paine most fully and perfectly From the evill of crime for so the Angel testifieth Hee shall save his people from their sinnes The bloud of Jesus Christ cleanseth us from all sinne that is that it may not be imputed unto us Mat. 1.21 1 John 1.7 and that it may not raigne in us but be abolished and so we at length leave off to sin Wherefore also he delivereth us from all paine and punishment For the cause being taken away which is sinne the effect is taken away which is punishment Rom 8.1 Now then there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus I give unto them eternall life This salvation
then which this our Saviour Jesus Christ bringeth us is righteousnesse and life everlasting Seventy weeks are determined to finish the wickednesse and to seale up the sinnes and to reconcile the inquity and to bring in everlasting righteousnesse Dan 9.24 1 Cor. 1.30 Hee is made unto us wisedome righteousnesse sanctification and redemption 3. How hee saveth Christ saveth us 1. By his merit HE saveth us after two sorts by his merit and by his efficacy 1. Hee saveth us by his merit or satisfaction because by his obedience passion death and intercession he hath merited for us remission of sinne reconciliation with God the holy Ghost salvation and life everlasting Testimonies hereof are these If any man sin we have an advocate with the Father 1 John 2.2 Jesus Christ the just And hee is the reconciliation for our sinnes and not for ours onely but also for the sinnes of the whole world that is for the sinnes of all sorts of men of what soever age place or degree The bloud of Jesus Christ the Sonne of God purgeth us from all sinne 1 John 17. Rom 3.25 Whom God hath set forth to be are conciliation through faith in his bloud to declare his righteousensse by the forgivenesse of sinnes By the obedience of one many shall be made righteous He was wounded for our transgressions Rom. 5.19 Esa 53.5 he was broken for our iniquities the chastisement of our peace was upon him and with his stripes wee are healed All we like sheep have gone astray we have turned every one to his owne way and the Lord hath laid upon us the iniquitie of us all 2 Cor. 5.2 Gal. 3.13 Hee hath made him to be sinne for us which knew no sin that we should be made the righteneousnesse of God in him Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law when hee was made a curse for us that the blessing of Abraham might come on the Gentiles through Christ Jesus Galat. 4.4 Galat. 3.13 that we might receive the promise of the Spirit through faith God sent forth his Son made of a woman and made under the Law that is made an execration or curse For wee are delivered not from the obedience but from the curse of the Law that he might redeeme them that were under the Law that wee might receive the adoption of the sonnes Heb. 9.14 How much more shall the bloud of Christ which through the eternall Spirit offered himselfe without spot to God purge your consciences from dead workes to serve the living God By the which will we are sanctified even by the offering of the body of Jesus Christ once offered By these and very many the like places of Scripture it is manifest that for Christs merit we are not only freed from punishment the remission of our sins being obtained but are also reputed righteous before God adopted of him to be his Sons blessed endued with the holy Ghost sanctified and made heires of everlasting life By his efficacy and powerfull working Christ saveth us by his efficacy power and operation because he not only obtaineth by his meriting for us remission of sins and that life which wee had lost but also applyeth effectually unto us by vertue of his Spirit through faith the whole benefit of our redemption For what benefits he merited by his death he doth not retain them unto himself but bestoweth them on us For salvation and life everlasting which himself had before he purchased not for himself but for us as being our Mediatour Therefore he revealeth unto us his Fathers will instituteth and maintaineth the ministery of his word whereby he giveth the holy Ghost by whom he worketh in us both faith whereby we applying Christs merit unto our selves may be assured of our justification in the sight of God through the force thereof and also conversion or the desire and love of new obedience So by his word and spirit he gathereth his Church he bestoweth and heapeth on in all blessings necessary for this life defendeth and preserveth it in this life against the force of Divels and the world and against all corporall and spirituall assaults of all enemies even to the end so that not one of those which are converted perisheth finally at length their bodies being raised in the last day from the dead hee fully delivers the Church from all sin and evill advancing it unto everlasting life and glory casting the enemies thereof into perpetual pain and torment To comprise the whole in a word his efficacy by his word and spirit regenerateth us in this life The efficacy of Christs merit performeth three things unto us 1. Our regeneration Mat. 18.17 and preserveth or sustaineth us being regenerate lest we fall away in the end raiseth us unto life eternall Of his revealing himself unto us and regenerating us speak these places No man knoweth the Son but the Father neither knoweth any man the Father but the Son and he to whom the Son will reveale him No man hath seen God at any time John 1.18 the onely begotten Son which is in the bosome of the Father he hath declared him Mat. 3.11 John 15 26. Ephes 4.8 10 11. 1. John 3.8 He that cometh after mee will baptise you with the holy Ghost and with fire I will send unto you from the Father the Spirit of truth When he ascended up on high he gave gifts unto men He ascended up on high that he might fill all things For this purpose appeared the Son of God 2. Our perseverance therein John 14.1 Mat. 28.20 John 14.18 23. that he might loose the workes of the Divel Of his raising us from death these Scriptures make evident mention I will raise him up in the last day No man shall take my sheep out of mine hands I give unto them eternall life and they shall never perish 3. Our Resurection from death Joh. 6.54 10.28 1 Cor. 15.28 Ephes 5.27 When all things shall he subdued unto him he shall make unto himselfe a glorious Church in the sight of God which he gathereth from the beginning of the world unto the end Hereby we may understand that the giving of the holy Ghost is a part of our salvation or delivery by Christ Jesus our Mediatour For the holy Ghost is he by who Christ effectually performeth this which he being our Intercessor with his Father hath promised his Father in our behalfe that is he teacheth us by illuminating our minds with the knowledge of God and his divine will and regenerateth or sanctifieth and guideth and stablisheth us that we may begin the study of holines persist and profit therein untill sin be fully abolished in us and sin being abolished death must needs be abolished which that he might together with death destroy Christ was sent of his Father into the world Christ is our most perfect Saviour Christ saveth us from all evils whether of crime or punishment by
and is called Annointed hee is in respect of those three called Annointed But the Mediatour which was called Messias or Annointed was to be the chiefe Prophet Priest and King of the Church Therefore hee is in respect of those three called Annointed or Christ Againe the same is shewed by many places of Scripture Joh. 7.28 6.38 I came not of my selfe c. I came down from heaven not to doe mine own will Heb. 5.5 but his will which hath sent me Christ took not to himselfe this honour to be made the High Priest but hee that said unto him Thou art my Son this day begate I thee c. The Lord swore Psal 11.4 Heb. 13.8 Rev. 13.8 1 Cor. 1.30 thou art a Priest for ever after the order of Melchisedeck Jesus Christ yesterday and to day the same is also for ever The Lambe slain from the beginning of the world Christ is made of God unto us wisedome and righteousnes and sanctification and redemption So he is often called the Angel of the covenant sent of old unto the Church 2. He is called Annointed in respect of the gifts of the holy Ghost which were poured on him thick abundantly and most perfectly that is all the gifts and graces whatsoever are in all the blessed Angels and Men and those in the most excellent and high degree that he might be sufficient for the restoring ruling preserving of his Church and for administring of the government of the whole world and for the directing thereof to the safety and salvation of his Church God giveth him not the spirit by measure Wherefore God John 3.34 Heb. 2.9 Esay 61.1 thy God hath annointed thee with the oyle of gladnesse above thy fellowes The Spirit of the Lord is upon mee Therefore hath the Lord annointed mee The annointing therefore is of the whole person yet with this difference That it is so applied to both natures as it signifieth the ordaining of them to the Mediatourship For he is Mediatour according to both natures who was alwaies present with his Church Christ is annointed in respect of his humanity not of his Godhead in respect whereof he is annointer even before the flesh was born But as his annointing designeth the communicating of the gifts of the holy Ghost so his humane nature only is meant to be annointed For his Godhead because it is alwaies in it selfe goodnesse most perfect and passing measure is not annointed but annointeth and filleth with gifts and graces both his owne humanity which his Godhead doth personally inhabit as also the Elect and chosen Wherefore one and the same Christ in respect of his divers natures is both annointed and annointer as raiser and raised For the Father annointeth with the holy Ghost but by the Lord So that Irenaeus saith pretily Lib. 3. cap. 20. That by the name of annointing was comprised and understood the three persons of the Godhead The annointer the Father the annointed the Son and the annointing which is the holy Ghost Ob. But it is nowhere read Christ annointed spiritually that Christ was annointed Ans Christ was not annointed typically ceremonially or sacramentally but really and spiritually that is hee received the thing it self which was prefigured and signified by the ceremoniall annointing which was the holy Ghost as it is said Wherefore God thy God hath annointed thee with the oyle of gladnesse above thy fellowes Psal 45.8 Heb. 1.9 Esay 61.1 The spirit of the Lord is upon me Therefore hath the Lord annointed me As therefore it was meet that Christ should be a Prophet a priest and a King not typicall but the very signified and true that is the great and high Prophet Priest and King so it was necessary that he should be annointed not with typicall oyle but with the signified and true oyle which was the holy Ghost For such as the office was such should the annointing be But the office was not typicall but the very thing it selfe Therefore such also shold the annointing be Hence we learne and understand these two things 1. That Christ hath his name not from the ceremoniall annointing Christ hath his name not from the ceremoniall annointing but from the thing thereby signified but from the thing it selfe which was thereby signified because hee is that chiefe and high Prophet Priest and King whom as types the Prophets Priests and Kings of the Old Testament which were wont to be annointed with externall oyle did represent The name therefore of the signe or type that is annointed is transferred to the thing it selfe even to the High Priest Prophet and King Jesus 2. That there is a great difference betweene this Jesus Annnointed and the Annointed of the Old Testament Three differences between Christ annointed and the annointed of the Old Testament For 1. They were onely certaine types and shadowes of this only chiefe and true Christ that is of this King Prophet and Priest Wherefore necessary was it that they should yeeld and give place to him being once exhibited For the thing it selfe being come and exhibited the types cease 2. The annointing that is the communicating of the gifts of the holy Ghost in the typicall Annointed was imperfect and weake But in Jesus Christ it is perfect and exceeding great For in him dwelleth the fulnesse of the Godhead personally so that hee is both the Annointed Colos 2.9 and Annointer 3. Hee onely hath received all the gifts of the holy Ghost and those many waies more excellent than they are found in all the Angels and Men because he had them in the highest both number and degree Of his fulnesse have all we received John 1.16 1 Cor. 12.11 Ephes 4.7 But the Annointed of the Old Testament received neither all the gifts neither in the highest degree but divided and according to the measure of the gift of Christ some more some fewer and some greater gifts than some much lesse were they able by their own power and vertue to work the same in others Object God cannot be annointed Christ is God Therefore hee could not be annointed no not with the prefigured or signified oyle Answ In some respect wee grant this whole reason Why God cannot be said to be annointed For Christ as touching his Godhead cannot be annointed with the gifts of the holy Ghost 1. Because not one jot of the gifts of the holy Ghost can be added to the Godhead because of the exceeding perfection thereof 2. Because the holy Ghost by whom the annointing is immediately administred is the proper spirit of Christ no lesse proceeding from him than from the Father Wherefore he as he is God hath not any thing from the holy Ghost neither doth he receive him which is already his owne from any other but giveth him unto others whom it pleaseth him As also no man can give thee thy spirit which is in thee because that which thou already hast cannot be given unto thee Repl. According
is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased heare him He that heareth you heareth me and he that despiseth you despiseth me and he that despiseth me despiseth him that sent me 3. What Christs Priest-hood is A Priest in generall is a person ordained by God to offer for himselfe and others oblations and sacrifices to pray for others and to instruct A Priest in generall Under prayer is comprehended blessing which is to wish them good from God There is one Priest which is signifying or typicall another signified Atypicall Priest The typicall Priest was a person appointed by God 1. To offer typicall sacrifices 2. To make intercession for himselfe and others 3. To declare to the people the doctrine of the Law and the promise of the Messias and true sacrifice which was to come Such were all the Priests of the Old Testament of whom one was the High-Priest the rest inferiour Priests and these three properties which we have reckoned were common to the High-Priest with the other inferiour Priests But some things the High-Priest had proper and peculiar to himselfe 1. That he alone entered into the Tabernacle called the Holiest of all The High-Priests prerogatives under the Law or Sanctuary and that but once every yeere not without blond which he offered for himself and the people burning incense there and making intercession for the people 2. That his raiment was more gorgeous 3 That he was set over the rest 4. That he onely was consulted of questions or matters doubtfull weighty and obscure whether appertaining to Religion or to the Common wealth and did returne the answers of God for the Princes and the people 5. And therefore did govern and order some counsels and offices of the State and Kingdom and did see that all things were lawfully administred The inferiours were all the other Priests of the Old Testament whose office it was To sacrifice to pray to teach the doctrine of the Law and the promise of the Messias to come and to make intercession for themselves and others Wherefore though the Leviticall Priests were a type of Christ yet the most notable type was the High-Priest for that he in moe things represented Christ out very true celestiall and perpetuall High-Priest Obj. 1. But it was the Prophets office to teach Therefore the Priests differed nothing from the Prophets Ans Both of them both the Prophets and the Priests did teach the people and it might so fall out also that the same was both a Priest and a Prophet as it is read of Jeremy But this was not perpetuall Three differences between the priests and Prophets in the Old Testament but accidentall Because 1. The Priests were ordained mediatly by men out of one certain Tribe namely the Leviticall but God immediately and by himself raised up Prophets out of any Tribe 2. There is a great difference found betwixt them as touching their function of teaching For the Prophets were raised extraordinarily and immediately by God himselfe and so received from him the doctrine which they were to declare unto men 3. They were so guided by the speciall motion of the holy Ghost that they could not erre in that doctrine which they uttered unto men in the name of God But the Priests as Priests 1. Were ordinary Ministers of the old Church 2. Were appointed by men 3. Were tied to the doctrine of Moses the Prophets which they learned not from God immediatly but mediatly by men 4. They might erre in doctrine counsell and did erre often when they departed from the law and were reprehended of the Prophets Wherefore as touching their function of teaching the Prophets differed from the Priests of the Old Testament after the same sort as in the New Testament the Apostles from other Ministers and Teachers of the Church The signified and true and only High Priest is the Son of God immediately ordained by ●od the Father himselfe Christ the true and prefigured High-Priest and annointed by the holy Ghost to reveale unto us the secret will of God and his counsell towards us and by assuming humane nature offer himself a sacrifice propitiatory for the sins of all mankinde to obtain for us by his intercession unto the Father remission of sins and eternall life and lastly to apply effectually his sacrifice unto us both by imputing it and also by illightening and moving the Elect by his Word and Spirit to receive it with a true faith having this testimony that hee is certainly heard of his heavenly Father for all those for whom he maketh intercession and withall having power to collect and gather his Church Wherefore there are foure principall parts of Christs Priesthood 1. To teach men both outwardl speaking to their eares by his voice and the voice of his Ministers and inwardly speaking to their hearts by the efficacy of his Spirit 2. To offer himselfe a sacrifice and ransome full sufficient and acceptable unto God for the sinnes of the world Christs intercession 3. To make continuall intercession for us unto the Father For this intercession is proper unto the Son not onely because himselfe living on earth in the time of his flesh was made a suppliant and a sacrifice for us unto his Father but also because hee earnestly and desirously will according to both natures that the Father for his sacrifice once accomplished on the Crosse remit unto us our sins and restore unto us righteousnesse and life and the Father looking upon the sacrifice and will of his onely beloved Sonne receiveth all Beleevers into his grace and favour Wherefore the Sonne in respect both of his merit and will to save us and of his Fathers continuall beholding and looking thereon hath from everlasting made intercession and also doth now and for ever in heaven appearing before his Father make intercession for all the Elect and Chosen To pray for the people is a thing common to all Priests but To make intercession both in heaven and earth unto the Father for us that our sinnes may be pardoned us is onely belonging to this high and onely Priest Christs applying of his merit unto us 4. To apply his sacrifice unto all those for whom hee prayeth And he applyeth it 1. When he procureth by prayer the Father to impute it unto us that is to receive us for it into favour and for it to love us 2. When himself also for the same sacrifice sake John 17.19 doth receive us into favour Father for their sakes sanctifie I my selfe 3. When he indueth us with true faith whereby we also may apply his satisfaction unto our selves that is may be assured and think that it is our righteousnesse whereby we may stand in the presence of the Lord. Foure differences between Christ other Priests Hereby also it is cleare in what other Priests differ from Christ 1. These teach onely by their outward voice and not by the inward working also of the holy
this righteousnesse so long as wee remaine in this mortall body is imperfect to be acceptable unto God for the righteousnesse of Christ which is imputed unto us Of this our communion with Christ these sayings make mention Wee being many are one body in Christ Rom. 12.5 1 Cor. 6.15 17. Ephes 4.15 Know yee not that your bodies are the members of Christ Hee that is joyned unto the Lord is one spirit In all things grow up into him which is the head that is The similitude of man a body to declare our union with Christ Christ Now the similitude of the head and members of the same body is most fit and appliable to declare that most straight and indissoluble conjunction of us with Christ For 1. As all the members of the body are knit to one and the same head and consequently to one another by sinews and fleshly ligaments And as in the head are engendred all vitall spirits who are the next or ready instruments of sense and motion as also all the outward and inward senses are feated in the head and thence onely from them the whole body and each member thereof doth draw life not from one another I say but from the head onely so long as they remain united to their head and among themselves so Christ is that one quickning head from whom his spirit is dispersed into all the members and not from one member into another and by whom all the elect who are the living members of the Church being united by the holy Ghost received through faith are quickned and are knit also among themselves by the meanes of mutuall charity Which charity and dilection must needs be there if we be joyned unto the head For the connexion of the members with the head is the originall and cause of the conjunction of the members among themselves For the quickning spirit of Christ doth not flow out of one member into another but out of one Christ as the head into all the members of the Church I will send unto you from the Father John 15.26 the Comforter the Spirit of truth 2. As in mans body are divers gifts and functions of the members and yet but one life and soule quickning and moving all the members so in the body of the Church are divers gifts and functions and yet but one spirit by the benefit whereof each member may doe his function 3. As the head is placed in the highest place and therefore is of more worthinesse and the foun●aine of all life So Christ hath the highest room and degree in the Church as in whom the spirit is without measure and of whose fulnesse all receive but in the members that is in Christians are certain measures of gifts which are derived into them from the only head and fountaine Christ Wherefore the Pope of Rome lyeth when he avoucheth himself to be the head of the Church Christ is our Head in three respects Christ is our head in three respects 1. In respect of his perfection because he is both God and man and in gifts as touching his humane nature excelleth all creatures In him dwelleth all the fulnesse of the God head bodily c. Hee alone giveth the holy Ghost This is hee who baptizeth with the holy Ghost 2. In dignity or order glory Col. 1.9 10 Mat. 3.11 majesty power authority which in his humane nature glorified hee now openly sheweth forth and declareth For as God created all things by him Heb. 1.2 3.6 so he hath made him heire of all things and the ruler of his house 3. In respect of his office For hee is the redeemer and sanctifier of his Church hee is over every member of the Church he ●●leth governeth quickneth nourisheth and confirmeth them so as they continue joyned in him with the rest of the members We are also in three respects the members of Christ 1. Because by faith and the holy Ghost wee are joyned unto him We are in three respects Christs members and also are knit together amongst our selves as the members to the head and one with another And this conjunction of the members of this body amongst themselves is no lesse requisite and behoovefull for the safety of the Church than the conjunction of the whole body with Christ the head For if thou separate the arme from the hand thou shalt separate it also from the head and so it shall no more have life Ephes 3.17 That Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith 2. Because we are quickned and guided of him and from him as the fountaine we draw all good things so that except we continue in him wee have not eternall life in us as neither the members sundred from the body retain life any longer If a man abide not in me he is cast forth as a branch and withereth John 5.6 3. Because as in mans body are divers faculties and functions of the members so are the gifts and functions divers of the members of Christ in the Church And as all the actions of the parts of the body are imployed and referred to the preservation thereof so all the members of Christ whatsoever they purpose or doe that ought they to imploy and referre to the profit and utility of the Church As we have many members in one body and all members have not one office so we being many are one body in Christ Rom. 11.4 1 Cor. 12.7 The manifestation of the Spirit is given to profit withall Whereas then now we understand what it is to be member of Christ and how we are his members it will the more cleerely appeare What anointing participation of annointing is What it is to be partaker of Christs anointing what it is to be partaker of Christs annointing Annointing signifieth a bestowing of gifts and participation of annointing importeth a communion of Christs gifts and office or annointing is a participation of all Christs benefits and consisteth in the participation of Christs Kingdome Priest-hood and Propheticall office To be partaker then of Christs annointing is 1. to be partaker of the holy Ghost and his gifts For the holy Ghost is not idle in us but worketh the same in us which he doth in Christ albeit Christ alone hath more gifts than wee all and those graces and gifts in Christ are far more excellent in degree 2. That Christ should communicate unto us his Propheticall Priestly and Royall function 2. What is the Propheticall function of Christians that is in what sense they are and are called Prophets CHrist maketh us partakers of his Propheticall honour or office not only in this that himselfe prophecieth unto us Christians are Prophets in knowledge and confession Acts. 2.17 Mat. 10.32 that is effectually instructeth us by his Word and Spirit but also because he willeth and bringeth to passe that we may also prophecie by professing and celebrating God According as it is said I will powre out of
my Spirit upon all flesh and your sonnes and your daughters shall prophecy Whosoever shall confesse mee before men him will I confesse also before my Father which is in heaven Our propheticall office therefore is 1. Rightly to understand and imbrace the doctrine perfect and necessary to salvation concerning God and his will 2. That every one in his place and degree professe the same being understood faithfully boldly constantly in word and life thereby both to celebrate God and to bring many schollars and disciples unto Christ. The difference between Christs Propheticall function and ours is 2 Differences of Christs Prophetical function with ours 1. That Christ hath the spirit without measure wee by measure For it is the proper spirit of Christ which floweth from him and is poured into the hearts of men we have him by gift He being but one hath all the gifts of the holy Ghost and those in the most excellent degree all we have but only some and those farre inferiour 2. That Christ effectually teacheth by moving the hearts of men to accord and assent The sound and voice of others without the inward sound and voice of the holy Ghost doth onely strike the cares neither pierceth it unto the heart 3. What is the Priest-hood of Christians What our Priest-hood is and the parts of it THe office of a Priest is to teach to pray and to sacrifice Wherefore our Priest-hood is 1. To teach and instruct others that is to declare and shew unto others the true knowledge of God And thou when thou art converted strengthen thy brethren Luke 22.32 2. To invocate on God being known aright of us 3. To performe unto God the duties of thankfulnesse to render him his due worship even all outward and inward obedience or to offer up unto God all our life time sacrifices of thanksgiving acceptable unto him What our sacrifices of thanksgiving are and sanctified by the sacrifice of Christ namely to offer up unto him 1. Our selves by mortifying the old man in us and by giving our members as weapons of righteousnesse unto God Rom. 6.13 2. Our prayers Let us therefore by him offer the sacrifice of praise alwaies to God that is the fruit of the lips which confesse his name Heb. 13.15 3. Our almes-deeds Thy prayer is heard and thine almes are had in remembrance in the sight of God 4. Our confession of the Gospel Grace is given mee of God that I should be the Minister of Jesus Christ towards the Gentiles Acts 13.31 ministring the Gospel of God that the offering up of the Gentiles might be acceptable 5. Our cheerefull under going and suffering of the crosse Rom. 15.15 16. that is all calamities persecution contempt banishments and even death it selfe for the confession of the truth and the glory of God Phil. 2.17 2 Tim. 4.6 Col. 1.24 Though I be offered up upon the sacrifice and service of your faith I am glad I am now ready to be offered Now rejoyce I in my sufferings for you and fulfill the rest of the afflictions of Christ in my flesh for his bodies sake which is the Church This Priest-hood Christ communicateth unto us 1. When by the efficacy of his spirit he works in us these forenamed sacrifices of thanksgiving How Christ maketh us Priests which we offer unto God 2. When by his merit and intercession unto his Father he causeth our sacrifices albeit unperfect and stained with our sins to be notwithstanding pleasing and acceptable unto God Our sacrifices different from Christs sacrifice three wates Now our sacrifices differ as well as the sacrifices of the old Priests from Christs sacrifice 1. Christ offered up together a sacrifice both of thankesgiving and propitiatory We offer up only sacrifices of thankesgiving The old Priests also offered up sacrifices of thanksgiving because these belong to the whole Church even from the beginning to the end of the world But those sacrifices which they offered besides were only typicall But no sacrifices of the New Testament are typicall but either eucharisticall and of thankfulnesse as are ours or propitiatory as is the obedience of Christ ot●● performed for us in suffering our punishment For he offered not a typicall or figurative but the reall or figured and signified sacrifice as being not a typicall but the signified Priest 2. The sacrifices of Christ are both perfect ours unperfect and defiled with many sins 3. The sacrifice of Christ pleaseth God for it selfe and for the worthinesse that is perfect in it selfe and meriteth remission of sins and eternall life of God for us because it is the death of the very Son of God Our sacrifices merit nothing of God and please him not for themselves but for Christs sacrifice wherewith they are sanctified 4. What is the kingdome of Christians Christians are Kings 1. By partaking of his victory and royalty 2. By having in themselves through him a power to overcome over rule both their enemies and all creatures John 16.33 Rev. 3.21 Luke 22.30 Our royall office 1 John 5.4 1 Tim. 1.18 2 Tim. 2.12 Mat. 25.34 WEe are partakers of Christs kingdome Because he is our King and doth communicate his victory and glory against his enemies and ours with us and maketh us by faith citizens of his kingdome the sons of God his brethren and co heires Because by the vertue and operation of his Spirit he also maketh us Kings that is the Lords over all creatures conquerors of our enemies and partakers of everlasting blisse and glory Be of good comfort I have overcome the world To him that overcometh will I grant to sit with mee in my throne That yee may sit on seates and judge the twelve tribes of Israel Our royall office therefore is 1. That by the vertue of Christs spirit who hath restored unto us our lost royall and heavenly dignity over all our enemies we fight continually against sin the world the divel and the flesh and overcome Which wee do when as by a true faith we are resolved that we have remission of all our sins and when by the same faith we receive the holy Ghost to represse sin even in this life as touching the beginning of our conquest 2. That at length all our enemies being by the grace of Christ fully brought under wee injoy eternall blisse and glory that is the heavenly kingdome which by the working of the holy Ghost is begun in us in this life and which we now possesse in hope but then shall in full possession inherit Our kingdome 1 Cor. 3.21 Fight a good fight having faith and a good conscience If we suffer we shall also reigne with him Inherit yee the kingdome prepared for you from the foundations of the world Briefly our kingdome is 1. That in Christ we are Lords over all creatures All things are yours 1 John 5.4 2. That we overcome our enemies by faith in Christ Who hath given us victory This
the flesh which he tooke Repl. 4. But hee is no where said to be invisible John 1.5 10. Ans He is said to have been in the world unknowne and this John speaketh of him as he was before his incarnation And then he was in the world invisible Likewise John 14.21 Mat. 28.20 I and the Father will come unto him And in the same place I will not leave you comfortlesse I will come unto you I am with you alway unto the end of the world that is invisibly as in the Father And if they will deny him to be with us because he is not seen they shall also exclude the Father Repl. 5. He is with us in power and vertue not in essence Ans This objection were rather to be hissed out than to be refuted Jer. 10.17 because he hath not an infinite power and vertue who hath a finite essence The gods that have not made the heavens and the earth shall perish from the earth how much more then the makers of such gods And the Word was with God in the beginning Wee interpret this that the Sonne was co-eternall with the Father and so joyned with him that notwithstanding hee was distinct in person from him They say that this Doctor and Teacher the man Jesus was known of God alone and not men but he was the Messias Answ 1. To be or Not to be with one when it is spoken of a person is never read in this sense as to signifie to be known or not known of one It is therefore an impudent forgery 2. John himselfe expoundeth it The Sonne which is in the bosome of the Father This doth not onely signifie to be known but also to be indeed in the Father to be intirely loved of him and to be fellow and co-partner of the secret and hidden counsels of the Father 3. He saith of himselfe That he came downe from heaven That hee came from the Father and came into the world That he returneth to the Father with whom he was before This doth not signifie a knowing or a not knowing but an existence and being 4. By him all creatures were made of the Father therefore he was present with the Father 5. He was in the world before he being made man came unto his owne and yet not known Therefore to be in the world and to be known of the world are not all one and by consequent neither is it all one to be with God and to be known of God 6. Christ himselfe expoundeth it I in the Father and the Father in mee This signifieth not onely a knowledge but a co-existence and joynt being mutuall And that Word was God Wee interpret That the Word is true God eternall Creatour of heaven and earth the same God with the Father and therefore divers from him as the Word from him that speaketh by him and the Son from the Father but having the same nature and essence of the God-head in him which the Father hath as Christ himself saith I in the Father and the Father in me He is every where in the Father as the Father every where in him But they say that he is God in respect of his gifts worthinesse excellency and office but not by nature Which they prove because others also are in this sense and respect called gods which have not any divinity of themselves therefore Christ also after the same manner seeing hee also hath his divinity from the Father Further they adde that we make two gods and deale contumeliously with the Father Answ Wee make not two gods because the Sonne is one with the Father as God that is having the same essence in him which the Father hath but is diverse and distinct from him as the Sonne and having in him the same Deity which the Father hath communicated But they are blasphemous and contumelious against the Father and the Sonne Because they honour not the Son John 5.23 as they honour the Father Now that Saint John understandeth a Son not a made created and inferiour God to the Father and a diverse God from him is proved and confirmed by many reasons but some few shall now suffice 1. Simply and absolutely without restraint to any certaine circumstance none is called God in the Scripture besides the onely true God eternall creatour of the world 2. That the Word was God before things were created and is the Creatour of all things S. John doth teach 3. He sheweth that he is the authour and fountaine of life and knowledge in men even from the beginning For this signifieth the true light that is which is properly and by it selfe light it selfe and the originall of light in others 4. This Word giveth power to be the sonnes of God John 1.12 This none can doe but the true God alone 5. We are to beleeve in his Name But we must beleeve in none but God only as himself proveth that therefore they must beleeve in him because they beleeve in God 6. John Baptist saith that he baptiseth with the holy Ghost And Christ himselfe often saith that hee will send the holy Ghost from the Father John 1.33 But no man can send the Spirit of God and work by him in the hearts of men but only he whose proper Spirit this is namely God Esay 40.3 Joh. 1.23 3.28 Luke 3.4 8. John 5.13 7. John Baptist is called the fore-runner of Christ who should prepare his way But he prepareth the way of the Lord. 8. Christ himselfe saith That the Father will that all should honour the Son as they honour the Father But no creature albeit excellent can be equalled in honour with the Creatour 9. Every where he is called the true God 1 John 5.20 Rom. 9.5 Act. 20.28 He. 1.8 10. 3.3 and the Lord. This is the true God and eternall life Who is God over all blessed for ever Amen God hath purchased his Church with his owne bloud The scepter of thy kingdome is a scepter of righteousnesse Thou Lord in the beginning hast established the earth and the heavens are the workes of thine hands Christ is counted worthy of more glory than Moses inasmuch as he which hath builded the house hath more honour than the house and hee that hath built all things is God 10. Hee is said to have come downe from heaven yet so that he remaineth in heaven to come unto his together with his Father to be with them unto the end of the world Therefore hee is of an infinite essence every where present and working both in heaven and earth But his humane nature is finite The God-head is after another sort communicated unto Christ than unto creatures Therefore he is God in respect of another nature Now to that which hath been objected concerning the communicating of the Deity unto others whereby they are called gods we answer by distinguishing the diversity thereof For unto others it is communicated by a created similitude of the
1. S. John teacheth the plaine contrary He was saith hee the life and light of all men and againe He lighteth every man that cometh into the world Therefore before his preaching and his nativity of the Virgin 2. John saith That he was in the whole world meaning thereby all mankind because he opposeth to this world his own nation and country to which he came 3. Hee saith That Christ was not knowne of that world which before was made of him Now the new world are the elect regenerated who after they are created that is regenerated of him know him 4. After that being in the world he was not known of it then lastly He came unto his own that is unto the Jewes being born of them and manifesting himselfe unto them in the flesh which hee took But he was no lesse despised of these If then he was first despised of the world and afterwards of his own for this the order of the prophesie requireth he was despised before his preaching and incarnation because in his flesh he manifested himself to none before the Jewes Other places also shew that he existed before his incarnation I was daily his delight rejoycing alwaies before him Prov. 8.30 And took my solace in the compasse of his earth and my delight is with the children of men 1 Pet. 3.18 He was quickned in the spirit by the which he also went and preached unto the spirits which were in times passed disobedient that now are in prison He came unto his owne He came unto his own and his own received him not Here John beginneth to speak of his coming into the flesh which he took of the Jewes unto whom he was promised and of his ministery among the Jewes and of their contempt towards him They sound this part with the former as if it were spoken of the same time But the course of his speech sheweth that his meaning is that Christ was before in the world not known and afterwards came to his own and was not received because although he was not already in the world yet then he came unto his own Therefore here is understood a new coming a new manifestation whereby after a singular and new manner he began to be in his own country and people which was then done when he was born of Mary and from thence forward The God-head of the Son But as many as received him to them he gave power to be the sonnes of God even to them that beleeve in his name Here is a triple proof of his divinity 1. None can give power to be the sons of God by his own power and authority but God himself But Christ not only as a Minister and Messenger but in his own name and of his own authority giveth this power and right Therefore he is God himself 2. He that maketh others the sons of God must regenerate them by the spirit of God and make them partakers of the Fathers nature This none doth or can doe but God himself Therefore Christ is by nature God 3. He gave this power to them that beleeve in his name But faith must not rest on any creature but on God only Therefore Christ is no creature but the eternall God And the Word was made flesh Saint John declareth the maner how that Word came unto his own The Word was made flesh namely that he was made man and that weak mortall like unto us in all things except sin Therefore he saith he was made flesh and conversed among men for a season Now he was man not by any change but by taking the humane nature unto his God-head They construe it That this Doctor or Teacher was not was made a man weake 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and base Which they will prove Because say they the Greek word signifieth oftentimes not to be made but to be as John was a man where the same Greek word was used Ans 1. The word signifieth more commonly to be made as All things were made by him The world was made by him In both which places as in others also the same Greek word is used 2. It signifieth in this place also that he was made 1. Because it was shewed before that the Word signifieth a subsistence or person which was from the beginning of the world 2. Hee began to be flesh when he came unto his own Now he teacheth that Christ did before time lighten all men that came into the world and was in the world not knowne when he came unto his own Therefore hee not only was but was made flesh which before he was not 3. Other places of Scripture which teach the same in other words doe not admit any other sense or meaning Hee took the seed of Abraham He took part of their flesh and bloud He took on him the form of a servant when as he was before in the form of God Heb. 2.16.14 Phil. 2.7 2 Cor. 8.9 1 Tim. 3.16 1 John 4.23 Hee being rich for your sakes became poore God is manifested in the flesh Jesus Christ is come in the flesh There is one thing therefore in Christ which came in the flesh and another thing which was the flesh it selfe wherein that came Repl. The place Hebr. 2. meaneth his delivering of us Ans First the words which goe before Secondly the sense sheweth that he speaketh not there of any qualities but of the very humane nature when as he sheweth that therefore Christ was necessarily to have been true man because men were to be delivered by him through his sacrifice The Word full of grace truth And the Word dwelt among us full of grace and truth Christ fulfilled all the promises and types and figures of the Law and did truely performe the office of a Redeemer and Mediatour not onely by his merit but also by his power and efficacy as afterwards is added out of John Baptists Sermon that this truth and grace befell unto us through Christ and of his fulnesse all who ever are saved have received Which S. Paul saith even that we are consummated and made perfect in him which would not be except the fulnesse of the God-head did dwell in him personally The glory of the only begotten And wee saw the glory thereof as the glory of the onely begotten Sonne of the Father This glory is the divine power which hee shewed in his miracles in his transfiguration upon the Mount in his resurrection from death his ascension into heaven his sending of the holy Ghost his power and efficacy by his Ministery Now thus farre they agree and confesse the same But when wee say further This glory testifieth him to be the onely begotten Sonne of ●od that is the Sonne of God by nature begotten of the substance of the Father w●● is also himselfe the very tr●● eternall God Maker of all things here they shake hands with us and dissent For they say That hee is called the onely begotten not
from the Father against Noetus and Sabellius and their Sectaries who would have the same to be the person of the Father and the Sonne and the holy Ghost which in respect of diverse functions and actions is now called the Father now the Sonne now the holy Ghost And therefore were they called Patripassians Also against Servetus who confounded the Sonne and the holy Ghost That the Word or Sonne of God is diverse and distinct from the Father and the holy Ghost not in office onely but also in subsistence and person is proved by foure arguments No one person can be both Father Son in respect of himselfe None is the same person with him whose sonne he is nor with him who proceedeth or floweth from him otherwise the same thing in one respect should be relative and correlative But the Word is the Son of the Father and from the Word the holy Ghost proceedeth and is given Therefore the Word is neither the Father nor the holy Ghost Christ another from the Father John 5.32 37. 9.16 5.19 14.16 Christ expresly calleth himselfe another from the Father and the holy Ghost There is another that beareth witnesse of mee namely the Father in the same Chapter My doctrine is not mine but his that sent mee The Son can doe nothing of himselfe save that hee seeth the Father doe I will pray the Father and he shall give you another Comforter Three persons expressed in Scripture 1 John 5.7 Gen. 1.26 Joh. 10.30 14.26 15.26 The Scripture doth plainly affirme that the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost are three There are three which beare witnesse in the heaven the Father the Word and the Spirit and these three are one Let us make man in our image he doth not say I will make but Let us make I and my Father are one he doth not say am but are The Comforter which is the holy Ghost whom the Father will send in my Name hee shall teach you all things When the Comforter shall come whom I will send unto you from the Father even the spirit of truth which proceedeth of the Father hee shall testifie of mee Teach all Nations baptizing them in the Name of the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost The holy Ghost descended in the shape of a Dove the Son was baptised in Jordan and the Fathers voice was heard from heaven Mat. 28.19 Mat. 3.17 This is my beloved Sonne in whom I am well pleased The properties of the persons are di●tinct diverse The attributes of properties of the persons namely sending revealing and their offices are diverse The argument is this Whose properties are distinct they are in themselves distinct But the properties of the Father the Son and the holy Ghost are distinct Therefore the Sonne is neither the Father nor the holy Ghost The Minor is proved because the Son onely and not the Father or the holy Ghost was begotten of the Father conceived by the holy Ghost made flesh sent into flesh manifested in the flesh made Mediatour baptised did suffer and died The Father of himself worketh by the Son Mat. 11. ●9 The Son not of himselfe but of the Father by the holy Ghost the holy Ghost of the Father and of the Sonne No man knoweth the Sonne but the Father neither knoweth any man the Father but the Sonne These wordes cannot be expounded after this sort No man knoweth me but I and no man knoweth me but I As the Father knoweth me 〈◊〉 14.13 so know I the Father The sense of these wordes cannot be this As I know me so I know me The Son of God therefore Christ is another from the Father and the holy Ghost THE THIRD CONCLUSION The Word is equall with the Father THat the Word or the Son of God Christ is no made God or inferiour to the Father or created of the Father before other things as Arius Eunomius Samosatenus Servetus and others the like Heretickes imagined but is by nature true and eternall God and equall unto the Father in God-head and in all essentiall perfections of the God-head is confirmed 〈…〉 16. ●● C●● 2.9 By testimonies of Scripture We are in him that is true that is in his Son Jesus Christ. The same is very God and eternall life All things that the Father hath are mine In him dwelleth all the fulnesse of the God-head bodily As the Father hath life in himself so hath he given unto the Son also to have life in himselfe Jo●●3 ● Ph●● ●● Who being in the forme of God thought it no robbery to be equall with God whatsoever things the Father doth the same things doth the Son also that all men should honour the Son 〈…〉 as they honour the Father But the Father is to be honoured as God Therefore Christ is God equall in honour with the Father Christ 〈…〉 God 〈…〉 He that hath the whole essence of the God-head is necessarily equall with the Father But the Son of God hath the whole essence of the God-head communicated unto him for this because it is infinite is indivisible therefore the whole must needs be communicated unto whomsoever it is communicated Therefore the Word or Son of God is equall in all things with the eternall Father in the God-head The Minor is proved Generation or begetting is a communicating of the essence the Word was generated or begotten of the essence of the eternall Father● because he is his Son proper naturall and only begotten Therefore the whole Deity was communicated unto the Word He hath the same properties of the God-head The Scripture giveth the same properties and perfections of divine nature unto the Son which it doth unto the Father as namely eternity omnipotency immensity omniscience the searching of the heart and reines He is eternall Prov. 8.25 John 1.1 John 3.13 Eph 3.17 For Before the mountaines were settled and before the hils was I begotten In the beginning was the Word He is immense or unmeasurable No man ascendeth up to heaven but he that hath descended from heaven the Son of man which is in heaven That Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith He is omnipotent Whatsoever things the Father doth John 5.19 Phil. 3.21 Heb. 1.3 the same things doth the Son also According to the working whereby he is able to subdue all things unto himselfe Bearing up all things by his mighty word He is omniscient or of infinite wisedome knowing all things His name shall be called Counsellor Esay 9.6 Mat. 11.27 No man knoweth the Son but the Father neither knoweth any man the Father but the Son c. He is the searcher of hearts But Jesus did not commit himself unto them John 2.24 25. because he knew them all And had no need that any should testifie of man for he knew what was in man Now we know that thou knowest all things He is the sanctifier of his Church
Son which agree to none else who are called gods and whereby God himself discerneth himself from other creatures and forged gods For unto whom the essentiall properties of any nature or essence doe truly and really agree unto him the essence it selfe must needs be given Object 1. Hee that hath all things of another is inferiour to him of whom hee hath them The Son hath all things of the Father Therefore he is inferiour unto the Father The Son hath all thing from the Father not by grace but by nature Ans The Major holdeth and is true of such an one as hath any thing by the grace and favour of the giver for he might not have it and therefore is by nature inferiour but it is false of him who hath all those things by his owne nature which he himselfe hath of whom he receiveth them For seeing he cannot but have them it cannot be that he should be inferiour or should have lesse than he of whom he receiveth them But the Son hath all things of the Father which the Father hath and that by nature and absolute necessity that is in such sort as that the Father cannot but communicate unto him all things which himselfe hath belonging to his divine Majesty John 5.26 John 17. ●0 As the Father hath life in himself so likewise hath he given to the Son to have life in himself All mine are thine and thine are mine Therefore he is equall unto the Father in all things Obj. 2. Hee that doth whatsoever he doth by the will of another interposed and going before is inferiour unto him The Son willeth and doth all things by the will of his Father going before Therefore he is not equall unto the Father in vertue The Son doth all things with the content of the Father in like manner as the Father dignity and essence Ans The Son doth all things his Fathers will going before not in time and nature but in order of persons so that he willeth or doth nothing which the Father also willeth not and doth and whatsoever the Father willeth and doth the same also the Son willeth and doth likewise that is with equall authority and power Wherefore the society and order of the divine operations doth not take away but doth most of all settle and establish the equality of the Father and the Son as also of the holy Ghost THE FOURTH CONCLUSION The Word is consubstantiall with the Father THese three former Conclusions being declared and set down namely That the Son is subsisting or a person That hee is distinct from the Father That hee is equall with the Father the fourth is easily gotten and obtained against the New Arrians to wit That he is consubstantiall with the Father which is also in like maner to be understood concerning the holy Ghost For either this must be granted or of necessity there are made three Gods which they though in words they deny it yet in very deed affirme when they frame and feigne three essences and spirits They grant that the Son is like-substantiall that is of like essence and nature with the Father which ●●●●deed true but this is not enough For the words Consubstantiall and Like-substantiall differ For like-substantiall signifieth moe persons and like essences as three men are like-substantiall For they are both three persons and three essences of like nature that is agree in humane nature But consubstantiall signifieth one essence and moe persons Thus in the God-head is not like-substantiall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because there are not three Gods but consubstantiall because there are three persons of one and the same divine essence For there is but one Jehovah that is one divine essence which is the same and is wholly in every of the three persons and therefore every of them are that one God besides which essence whatsoever is it is a creature not God The Father indeed is one person and the Son another person but the Father is not one God and the Son another John saith There are three which bear record in heaven but they are three persons not three Gods which bear this record We therefore hold against Arrius that Christ was not only like-substantiall but also consubstantiall with the Father that is hath the same individuall divine essence with the Father The Latine Church turneth the Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 consubstantiall taking substance for essence It is therfore the same that co-essentiall that is of one and the same essence The arguments which shew the Father and the Son to be of one the same essence are these 1 Jehovah * Deut. 6.4 The English translations retain not the word Iehovah but use The Lord instead thereof which is the signification of Jehovah and therefore in effect all one Jerem. 23.6 Esay 25.9 Hag. 2.9 Zach. 2.8 Malac. 3.1 is but one essence or one God But the eternall Father and the Son co-eternall with the Father are that Jehovah Therefore these two are one essence and one God The Minor is proved 1. By those places of Scripture which call the Son Jehovah This is the name whereby they shall call him Jehovah or the Lord our righteousness The expected God and Saviour is called Jehovah But the Messias is the expected God and Saviour who in the same sense is called The Desire of all Nations Therefore the Messias is that Jehovah whereof the Prophet speaketh The Deliverer of the Church sent from Jehovah which is the Messias only is called Jehovah He is called Jehovah whose fore-runner was John Baptist But John Baptist was the fore-runner of the Messias or the Son of God Christ He therefore is called Jehovah Hitherto belong all the places in which are given to the Angel or Messenger of Jehovah both the name of Jehovah and the divine properties and honours But that Angel was the Son of God not the Father Therefore the Son is Jehovah Again the Minor is also hereof manifest Joel 2.31 Psal 68.18 Eph. 4.8 Psal 95.9 1 Cor. 10.9 Psal 97.7 Heb. 1.6 Psal 102.6 Heb. 1.10 Esay 8.14 28.16 Luke 2.34 Rom. 9.33 Esay 41.4 Rev. 1.17 21.6 for that what things in the Old Testament are spoken of Jehovah those in the New are referred unto Christ as He that ascended on High and gave gifts is Jehovah and the same is Christ Jehovah was tempted in the desart and the same is Christ He that is to be worshipped and is Creator of all things is Jehovah and the same is Christ The stone of offence The first and the last is Jehovah and the same is Christ Lastly the same is proved by those testimonies which attribute things that are proper to Jehovah unto Christ also as authour and effecter or worker of them 2. The true God is but one The Son is the true God equall with the eternall Father in God-head properties works and honour as hath bin before declared This same is
very God and eternall life Christ which is God over all blessed for ever Therefore the Son is that one and the same God or that selfe-same divine essence which is God 3. Whose essence is distinct their spirit is not one in essence which proceedeth of both and is proper unto both but is either of a diverse essence or compound whether he be of a part or of the whole essence of them of whom he proceedeth But one and the same is the Spirit of the Father and the Son proceeding of both proper unto both and by him both work effectually Gal. 46. God hath sent the Spirit of his Son into our hearts Therefore the Father and the Son are one essence and the same God Otherwise each essence should have his proper spirit and diverse 4. Vnto whom the eternall Father communicateth the same essence which himselfe hath and that whole hee is of the same essence with him Vnto the eternall Son the eternall Father communicateth his essence the same and whole Therefore the Sonne is of the same essence with the Father The Minor is proved because Christ is the onely begotten and proper Sonne of the Father begotten therefore of the essence of the Father But the divine Essence or God-head by reason of the immensity and great simplenesse thereof can neither be multiplied nor divided Therefore the Father communicateth the same and that whole unto the Son Wherefore as in respect that it is the whole essence of the God-head which is commmunicated unto him of the Father hee is co-equall with the Father so in respect that it is the same which the Father hath and retaineth hee is co-essentiall and consubstantiall with the Father Certaine generall heads of those reasons wherewith Heretickes both old and new oppugne this Doctrine That there is both an equall and one and the same God-head of the Father and the Son and also of the holy Ghost with Rules whereby answer may be easily and soundly made unto their objections 1. THe Heretickes build on most false principles and grounds such as this is If the Father begot one of his substance he could also have begotten moe and the Son also might beget another 1. Rule or moe sons For answer this Rule is to be held Wee are to judge of God according to his owne word not according to Hereticall braines and he is to be acknowledged such as he revealeth himselfe in his word as being the eternall Father with the only begotten Son and the holy Ghost For God hath so revealed himselfe that he begot the Son and that one Son only Therefore wee ought to rest here and not to imagine false conceits of our owne 2. They reason out of naturall principles or grounds which are such as are true in things created and finite but false in God who is an essence infinite as Three cannot be one Three persons really distinct cannot be one essence An infinite person cannot beget an infinite person That which begetteth and that which is begotten are not one and the same essence Likewise He that communicateth his whole essence to another doth not himselfe remaine the same which he was To this we answer by another Rule 2. Rule Those principles which are true of a finite nature are foolishly and impiously translated to the infinite essence of God And arguments of this sort are refuted not by a simple deniall of them but by distinguishing between natures capable and uncapable of those principles whereon they ground 3. Of the properties of the humane nature in Christ they inferre the inequality and diversity of his God-head As Christ suffered died c. Therefore he is not God The Rule whereby we answer to this 3. R●el is Those things which are proper to the humane nature are not to be drawn to the divine nature For Christ died not as God but as man 4. They confound the office of the Mediatour with the nature or person that is they goe from the office to the nature As Christ is sent of the Father Therefore he is inferiour to the Father 4. Rule The Rule to answer this is The inequality of office doth not inferre inequality of nature or persons Or as Cyril saith The sending and obedience take not away the equality of power or essence So the Father is said to be greater than the Son not in nature or God-head but in manifestation For not the Father but the Son was made base and miserable in the humane nature assumed Where then Christ saith that his Father is greater than he it is meant in respect of his humane nature and in respect of his office of the Mediatourship 5. They exclude and shut out the Son and the holy Ghost from those things which are attributed unto the Father as the fountain of all divine operations As The Son saith that his workes are the workes of the Father Therefore hee is not authour of them neither doth hee those works of his own power but only is the instrument whereby God the Father doth them The Rule and Answer hereto is 5. Rule Those things which are ascribed unto the Father as fountain are not removed from the Son or the holy Ghost to whom they are communicated that they may have them their owne and proper For the Son worketh likewise and in like manner Vnto whom the Father likewise did give to have life in himselfe 6. They detract those things from the Son and the holy Ghost 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 John 5.26 whereby the Divinity in the person of the Father is discerned from creatures or false gods To which this Rule answereth 6 Rule As often as in Scripture one person of the God-head is opposed to creatures or false gods and is discerned from them the other persons are not excluded from the God-head but onely those things are excluded against which the comparison is made Or The divine properties operations and honour are so attributed to one of the persons as that notwithstanding they are not taken away from the other persons of the God-head but onely from creatures Againe A superlative or exclusive speech used of one person doth not exclude the other persons of the God-head but creatures and feigned gods unto whom the true God either in one or in moe persons is opposed John 10.25 The Father is greater then all that is then all creatures not then the Son or the holy Ghost I give eternall life unto them that is no creature doth give it For both the Father also and the holy Ghost doe quicken and give life The Father onely knoweth the day of judgment that is no creature That they may know thee to be the onely very God Mat. 24.26 John 17.3 here the Son is not excluded from true Deity but Idols and false gods to which God the Father is opposed 7. They wrest the phrase of Scripture to another sense as 1 Cor. 15.24 7. Rule The Son shall deliver up
it is 1. The very union of the humanity with the Word in such sort as it being created and finite doth together with all the essentiall properties thereof subsist not in a created person of the same humane nature but in the increate and eternall person of God the Word by reason of which union God the Word but not the God-head is and is called truly man and contrary man but not the manhood is and is called truly eternall God No dignity and eminency can be imagined greater than this neither doth it agree to any but to the flesh of Christ only 2. It is the excellency of gifts For these Christs humanity received without measure that is all whatsoever and most great and most perfect that may fall into a created and finite nature 3. The office of the Mediatour to the performing whereof the united but yet distinct properties and operations of both natures doe necessarily concur 4. The honour and worship which by reason of the Mediatourship agreeth and is given to whole Christ according to both natures keeping still as was before said the difference of properties and operations in natures Now whatsoever testimonies some bring either out of the Scriptures or out of the Fathers which were sound in faith thereby to prove that their Eutychian transmutation and a third kind of communicating forged by themselves that is exequation or equalling of natures all those testimonies indeed belong either to the grace of union of the natures which is signified by the communicating of properties or to the grace of Christs headship which compriseth the office and honour of the Mediatour which are affirmed of whole Christ by way of communicating or to the habituall grace that is the created gifts which Christ received without measure which are properly affirmed of the flesh or humanity These gifts which are also called graces are not properly effects of the personall union as are the attributes or properties of the natures and office 1. Because they are communicated to the manhood as well of the Father and the holy Ghost as of the Word or Son For he is said to have received of the Father the spirit without measure that is abundantly likewise to be annointed with the holy Ghost And if the gifts were effects of the union it would follow of necessity that the flesh was united not to the Son onely but to the Father also and the holy Ghost 2. The union of the flesh with the Word was from the very moment of the conception alwayes most perfect But the consummation and perfection of gifts was not untill the accomplished time of his resurrection and ascension For he was indeed humble weake and contemned he was indeed ignorant of some things he did indeed increase in wisdome stature and in favour not with men onely but also with God himselfe 3. The flesh when it was in the state of humility had not immortality or a nature not subject to sufferings or the like and yet remained it alwayes united with the Word Wherefore the habituall gifts or graces of the humanity for which it is also in it selfe really wise mighty just holy follow not the personall union in respect of dependency as the effect followeth and dependeth of his cause but only in respect of order Because indeed the humane nature was first to subsist and be before it were inriched with gifts and it subsisted united to the Word in the very first moment of the conception But after what manner the humanity is united unto the Sonne of God hath been said before For by the speciall and miraculous working of the holy Ghost in the womb of the Virgin of her bloud was the flesh of Christ formed sanctified and united according to subsistence or personally unto the Word 4. Why it was necessary that the two natures should be united in the person or subsistence of the Sonne of God FOr what cause Christ our Mediatour was to be together both a true and perfect just man and true that is by nature man and withall true God hath been declared of us before in the Common-place of the Mediatour For the work of our Redemption could not have been compassed and finished by the Mediatour without the concurrence of divers natures and operations in the same person For albeit he suffered and died in the flesh yet his passion and suffering could not have that force and efficacy to redeem justifie and sanctifie us neither could Christ have applyed those benefits unto us except he had been withall true and naturall God Of the incarnation of the Word the confession made by the Fathers of Antioch against Paulus Samosatenus This confession in taken out of the Acts of the first Ephes●●e Councell WE confesse our Lord Jesus Christ begotten before all worlds of his Father but in the last times borne according to the flesh of the Virgin by the holy Ghost subsisting in one person only made of the celestiall God-head and humane flesh Whole God and whole man Whole God also with his body but not according to his body God whole man also with his God-head but not according to his Godhead man Againe whole adorable also with his body but not according to his body adorable Whole adoring also with his God-head but not according to his God-head adoring who le increate also with his body but not according to his body increated Whole formed also with his God-head but not according to his God-head formed Whole consubstantiall with God also with his body but not according to his body consubstantiall as neither also according to his God-head he is co-essentiall with men but he is according to the flesh consubstantiall unto us existing also in his God-head For when we say he is according to the spirit consubstantiall with God we doe not say he is according to the spirit co-essentiall with men And contrarily when we affirme him to be according to the flesh consubstantiall with men we doe not affirme him to be according to the flesh consubstantiall with God For as according to the spirit he is not consubstantiall with us for according to this he is consubstantiall with God So on the other side he is not according to the flesh co-essentiall with God but according to this he is consubstantiall with us And as we pronounce these to be distinct and divers one from the other not to bring in a division of one undivided person but to note the distinction and unconfoundablenes of the natures and properties of the Word and the flesh so we affirme and worship those as united which make to the manner of the undivided union or composition Vigilius Lib. 4. against Eutyches IF there be one nature of the Word and flesh how then seeing the Word is every-where is not the flesh also found every-where For when it was in the earth it was not verily in heaven and now because it is in heaven it is not verily in the earth and insomuch it is not as
the place and state of the blessed where both of us shall be free from these paines that is he speaketh of felicity and liberty which is not in hell for his meaning is both of us who now suffer shall this day be in Paradise a place of everlasting salvation or happinesse where being delivered from all torments we shall injoy most pleasant quiet and repose But Paradise is neither hell nor in hell which is the place of torment Whereupon also it is cleere that Christ spake this to the Thiefe not of his God-head but of that which suffered which was his soule For the God-head was not with the Thiefe neither did Christ suffer or was elivered as touching his God-head but as touching his soule 2. If Christ did locally descend into hell Because there was no cause why Christ should descend Jo●● 39.30 he descended either to suffer or to deliver the Fathers thence as the Papists affirme But he descended not to suffer because now all things were finished on the Crosse as Christ himselfe also hanging on the Crosse said It is finished Hee descended not to deliver the Fathers 1 1. Not to suffer 1. Because hee did this before in suffering for them on the earth 2 2 Not to tree the Fathers out of the Limbo Wisd 3.1 Luke 16.26 2. He did the same by his power and efficacy of his God-head from the very beginning of the world not by the descension of his soule or body into hell The Fathers were not in Limbo Therefore they could not be delivered thence as it is said The soules of the just are in the hand of God Between you and us there is a great gulfe set so that they which would goe from hence to you cannot neither can they come from thence to us And in the same place Lazarus dying is said to be carried by the Angels into Abrahams bosome not into Limbus Patrum Some thinke that Christ indeed descended not into hell either to suffer 3 3. Not to triumph over Death and the Divell and affright them 1 Pet. 3.19 or to deliver the Fathers thence but to shew there the Divell and death his victory and to strike a terrour into them But that Christ descended for this cause is no where found extant in Scripture They object unto us first that place of Peter By the which he also went and preached unto the Spirits that are in prison which were in time passed disobedient Answ Peters meaning in this place is not as these men conjecture but is on this wise Hee saith Christ went that is being sent from the beginning of the Father unto the Church By his Spirit that is by his God-head To the Spirits that are now in prison that is in hell He preached in time passed When as yet they lived and were disobedient namely before the Floud For then hee preached to the disobedient when they were disobedient But they were disobedient in the time of Noah Therefore Christ preached by Noah and by the Fathers inviting the disobedient to repentance Farther if Peter here spake of the descension into hell yet this was not their opinion who pretend the broaching of it but the Papists who affirme and teach that Christ preached in hell unto the Fathers and delivered them 1 Pet. 4.6 They bring another place of Peter The Gospell was also preached unto the dead Answ That is unto those which are now dead or were then dead when Peter wrote this and who then lived when the Gospell was preached unto them They wrest and misconstrue also a place of Paul Ephes 4.9 Christ descended into the lowest parts of the earth Answ Into the lowest parts of the earth that is into the earth which is the lowest part of the world For one part of the earth is not opposed unto another but the earth is opposed unto heaven and the humiliation of Christ is thereby signified This interpretation is proved by the scope and drift of the Apostle who maketh in that place an opposition of Christs great glory and his great humiliation So on the other side Christ ascended into the highest paris of heaven that is into heaven into the highest part of the world These places therefore make nothing for the descension of Christ into hell and were it so that these places alledged to establish this opinion were to be understood of a locall descension of Christ into hell yet would they not make for them but rather for the Papists who teach that Christ preached unto the Fathers in hell and thence delivered them Now if these testimonies help not the Papists much lesse will they help them For it is certaine that it cannot be thence proved that Christ descended into hell to strike a terrour into death and the Divell This opinion indeed is not impious or ungodly and is approved by many of the Fathers so that we are not to contend maliciously with any therein yet I leave it because it is not grounded on any firme reasons neither can be gained by witnesse of Scripture and contrary reasons are at hand easie to be had For 1. After his death when he had said It is finished the soule of Christ rested in the hands of his Father into which he had commended it And 2. If hee descended to triumph this Article should be the beginning of his glorification but it is not likely that Christ took the beginning of his glorification in hell For it is apparent by the opposition of the Article following that Christs descension was the lowest degree of his humiliation And yet I confesse withall that Christ strook a greater terrour into the Divels but that was by his death whereby hee disarmed and vanquished the Divell Sin and death and without doubt the Divell perceived himselfe conquered by the death of Christ Hell signifieth in this place the terrours and torments of the soule What meaneth then this Christs descension into hell It signifieth 1. Those extreme torments straights and griefes which Christ suffered in his soule namely the wrath of God against sinners and that such as the damned feele partly in this life and partly in the life to come 2. The exceeding and extreme ignominy and reproach which Christ suffered That Christ suffered these things is proved by the testimony of David before alledged The griefes of hell caught mee Psal 116.3 which is said of Christ in the person of David There are other the like sayings whereby the same is proved The Lord would breake him and make him subject to infirmities Esay 53.10 Mat 26.31 My soule is very heavie even unto the death The same doe those his vexations also shew in the Garden when he sweat bloud because The Lord hath laid upon him the iniquities of us all Luke 22.44 Esay 53.6 Therefore he crieth out My God my God why hast thou forsaken mee The same is also proved by these reasons 1. Christ was to redeeme not only our bodies
severed by death Truely and hee did truely come forth even out of the grave also in despite of the Watch-men they being withall amazed and stricken therewith 2. He rose the same person which he died the same Jesus Christ God and Man according to the nature wherein he suffered namely In his true body according to his humane nature even the true humane nature and the same in essence and properties and that not deified but glorified all infirmities thereof being done away Behold my hands and my feet for it is I my selfe handle mee and see mee for a spirit hath not flesh and bones as yee see mee have And truely nothing else could rise againe Luke 24.39 but that which had fallen The same body therefore which fell did rise again which is the greatest comfort unto us For hee must have been one and the same Mediatour who should merit for us a communicating and participation of those benefits which we had lost by sin and who should restore the same unto us and apply them to every one Again except Christ flesh had risen neither should ours rise 3. He rose by his owne power that is he put death to flight and shook it from himselfe quickened his dead body re-united it to his soule By his own power John 2.29 John 10.18 John 5.21 Rom. 4.24 8.11 and restored un to himself a blessed heavenly and glorious life and that by the might and power of his God-head Destroy this Temple and in three dayes I will raise it up again I have power to lay downe my soule and have power to take it up againe As the Father raiseth up the dead and quickneth them so the Son qu●ckneth whom he will Obj. But the Father raised him For it is said If the Spirit of him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you c. Therefore he raised not himself Ans The Father raised the Son by the Son himself not as by an instrument but as by another person of the same essence and power with the Father by which the person doth ordinarily work The Son is raised of the Father by himselfe himselfe hath raised up himselfe by his Spirit For John 5.19 Whatsoever things the Father doth the same things doth the Son also 4 Hee rose the third day by his Fathers and his owne power The third day 1. Because the Scriptures in which are understood all the prophecies and types under the Law doe shew that Christ ought to rise the third day as for example wee may instance in Jonas who fore-shewed Christ 2. Because his body was to rise not being tainted with any corruption and yet not forth-with the first day that his death might undoubtedly be knowne but the third day after his Passion on the Crosse The circumstance therefore of the third day is inserted in the Creed that the truth might be correspondent to the type and we ascertained that this Jesus is the Messias promised to the Fathers because he alone rose the third day 3. For what cause Christ rose CHrist rose The glory of the Father and the Son Rom. 1.4 John 17.1 For his Fathers and his owne glory Declared to be the Son of God by the resurrection from the dead Father glorifie thy Son that thy Son may also glorifie thee For the glory of the Son is the glory of the Father Because of the prophecies Psal 16.10 Acts 2.27 In respect of the prophecies which were uttered of his death and of his resurrection Thou shalt not leave my soule in the grave neither shalt thou suffer thine boly One to see corruption When hee shall make his soule an offering for sinne hee shall see his seed Esay 53.10 Mat. 12 39. and shall prolong his dayes Hee shall see of the travell of his soule and shall be satisfied No signe shall be given unto it save the signe of the Prophet Jonas For as Jonas was three dayes and three nights in the Whales belly so shall the Sonne of Man be three dayes and three nights in the heart of the earth As yet they knew not the Scripture Mat. 25.54 that hee must rise againe from the dead In regard of these and other such prophecies it was necessary that Christ should die and rise againe that the Scriptures might be fulfilled How then should the Scriptures be fulfilled which say that it must be so to wit because of Gods unchangeable decree revealed in the Scriptures of which decree the Apostles in the Acts speak Acts 4.27 28. saying Doubtlesse against thine only Son Jesus whom thou hast anointed both Herod and Pontius Pilate with the Gentiles and the people of Israel gathered themselves together to doe whatsoever thine hand and thy counsell had determined before to be done Hither also belong Christs own predictions hereof Mat. 17 23. John 2.19 They shall kill the Son of Man but the third day hee shall rise again I will raise up this Temple again The worthinesse of the person rising Acts 2.14 John 3.35 For the worthinesse and power of the person that rose For for this cause it was impossible that Christ should be held of death as Peter testifieth and that 1. Because Christ is the beloved and only begotten Son of God The Father loveth the Son and hath given all things into his hands So God loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son c. 2. Christ is true God and authout of life I am the resurrection and life John 5.26 ●1 10.28 As the Father hath life in himselfe so likewise hath he given to the Son to have life in himselfe As the Father raiseth up the dead and quickneth them so the Son quickneth whom he will I give unto them eternall life It had been absurd then that he should not be raised but sleep in death who giveth life to others 3. Christ is righteous in himself and by dying satisfyed for our sins which were imputed to him Now where sin is not there doth not death reigne any more With one offering hath he consecrated for ever them that are sanctified Heb. 10.14 Rom. 5.10 In that he died he died once to sin but in that he liveth he liveth to God The office of the person In respect of the office of the person who rose which had he remained in death he could not have discharged For 1. The Mediatour who was true God and Man should reigne for ever Thy throne O God is for ever and ever the Scepter of thy Kingdome is a Scepter of righteousnesse Psal 45.7 2 Sam. 7.13 14. I will stablish the throne of his Kingdome for ever I will be his Father and he shall be my Son I have sworne once by my holinesse that I will not faile David Psal 83.34 35 36. Ez. 37.23 24. His seed shall endure for ever and his seate is like as the Sun before mee Hee shall stand fast for evermore as the
14.2 Our glorification or ascension For seeing Christ our head is ascended we are certaine that we also shall ascend into heaven as being his members I go to prepare a place for you And though I go to prepare a place for you I will come againe and receive you unto my selfe that where I am there may yee be also Object But Elias and Enoch ascended before Christ Therefore Christ is not by his ascension the cause of our ascension Answ They ascended in respect of Christs ascension which was to come Christs ascension and glorification is the cause and example of our ascension and glorification because except he were glorified we should not be glorified For the Father hath decreed to give us all things by the Messias and hath put all things in his hands And how should Christ have given us a Kingdome except himselfe first as being the first-borne had taken possession thereof but for this cause also he ascended into heaven that he might there reign Therefore he will translate his Citizens thither And seeing wee are his members and he our head is already ascended and glorified Therefore shall we also ascend and be glorified Where I am there shall also my servant be John 12.26 14.3 I will receive you unto my selfe that where I am there may yee be also The sending of the holy Ghost The sending of the holy Ghost by whom he gathereth comforteth and defendeth his Church to the worlds end Hee was given also to the godly which were under the Law before Christs ascension and coming But that was 1. In respect of this ascension and glorification of Christ which was then to come and whereof that sending and powring out of the holy Ghost is not a fruit only but also a part and so in respect also of this sending which was now after Christs ascension accomplished the holy Ghost was given unto the godly in the Old Testament 2. Now after Christs glorification it was given more abundantly as in the day of Pentecost that which also was fore-told And it shall be in the last dayes saith God I will powre out my spirit upon all flesh Now J●el 2.28 Acts 2.17 that Christ did not powre out the holy Ghost in such plenty before his ascension that befell only as before was said in respect of the decree of God For God would that the holy Ghost should be given by the Messias as well man as God wherefore man also was to be glorified who should doe this It is expedient for you that I goe away for if I goe not away the Comforter will not come unto you but if I depart I will send him unto you John 16.7 By the efficacy and working of this his spirit we seek things above because there is our treasure there are our goods and that because Christ hath therefore ascended that he might make those good things ours which were there long before And this is the Apostles argument Col. 3.1 There are other fruits also of Christs ascension For Remission of sins John 16.10 it is a testimony That our sins are fully pardoned us who doe beleeve For except hee had suffered the punishment for sins he could not have entered into the throne of God For where sinne is there is death also Hee shall reprove the world of righteousnesse because I goe to my Father Conquest or victory over death It is a testimony That Christ is indeed Conquerour of death sinne and the Divell The comfort of the Church John 16 7. Eph. 4 8. It is a testimony That wee shall never be left destitute of comfort because he therefore ascended to send the holy Ghost If I goe not away the Comforter will not come When hee ascended up on high hee led captivity captive and gave gifts unto men The defence of the Church It is a testimony That Christ will for ever defend us because wee know that our head is a glorious head and placed above all principalities The meaning of the Article He asce●ded into heaven Now what it is to beleeve in Jesus Christ which ascended into heaven Answ It is to beleeve 1. That he did truly and not in shew only ascend into heaven and now is there resident in his humanity and sitting at the right hand of his Father untill he thence returne unto judgment would be called on by us 2. That he hath ascended for our sakes and now appeareth in the prescence of God maketh intercession for us sendeth us his holy Spirit and will one day take us unto himselfe that wee may be where he is and reigne with him in glory Quest 50. Why is it further said He sitteth at the right hand of God a Ephes 1.20 21 22 23. Col. 1.18 by whom the Father governeth all things b Ans Because Christ therefore is ascended into heaven to shew thereby that he is Head of the ChurchMat 28.18 John 5.22 The Explication Christs sitting at Gods right hand differeth from his ascension TO sit at the right hand of God and to ascend into heaven are things different for one may be without the other Wherefore this Article differeth three waies from the former In order Because in this Article is declared the end of his ascension For Christ did therefore ascend into heaven that he might sit at the right hand of the Father In continuance Because Christ sitteth alwaies at the right hand of the Father but into heaven he ascended but once In end The Angels do ascend and we shall also ascend into heaven but yet neither they nor we shall sit at the right hand of God For To which of the Angels said God at any time Sit at my right hand Heb. 1.13 untill I have made thine enemies thy foot-stoole much lesse did God say thus unto any man Christ alone excepted The Questions of Christs sitting at the right hand of the Father are 1. What the right hand of God signifieth in the Scriptures 2. What it is to sit at GODS right hand 3. Whether Christ did alwaies sit at Gods right hand 4 What are the fruits of Christs sitting at the right hand of the Father 1. What the right hand of God signifieth THe right hand as also other members are attributed unto God by an Anthropopathy or resemblance after the maner of men and in Scripture the right hand of God signifieth 1. The omnipotency or exceeding vertue of God Him hath God lift up with his right hand Acts 5.31 Psal 118.16 Exod. 15.6 to be a Prince and a Saviour The right hand of the Lord hath done valiantly Thy right hand O Lord hath bruised the enemy 2. It signifieth perfect glory perfect dignity and full divine majesty and in this sense it is here taken 2. What it is to sit at Gods right hand TO sit at Gods right hand is to be a person equall to God in power and glory by whom the Father worketh immediately
6.17 to comfort me d Joh. 15.26 Acts 9.31 and to abide with me forever e John 14.16 1 Pet. 4.14 The Explication IN this last part of the Apostolick confession are contained six Articles whereof the first speaketh of the person of the holy Ghost the next of the Church which is gathered confirmed and preserved by the holy Ghost the foure Articles following are of the benefits bestowed by the holy Ghost on the Church and of the communion of Saints 2. of remission of sins 3. of the resurrection of the flesh 4. of everlasting life Touching the holy Ghost three things are especially to be considered his person his office his gifts and works But for more full and ample explication hereof these Questions following are each in their order to be examined 1. What the name * It is here to be noted that this Question serveth more properly for the Latine which useth this name Spiritus onely when as we in English use as much or more rather the word Ghost then Spirit when wee speak of the third person Spirit signifieth 2. Who and what the holy Ghost or Spirit is 3. What is the holy Ghosts office 4. What and of how many sorts his gifts are 5. Of whom the holy Ghost is given and wherefore 6. To whom and how far forth he is given 7. When and how hee is given and received 8. How he is retained and kept 9. Whether he may be lost and how 10. Wherefore hee is necessary 11. How wee may know that hee dwelleth is us 1. What the name Spirit signifieth THe name spirit is sometimes taken for the cause sometimes for the effect When it is taken for the cause it signifieth a nature incorporeall and living of a spirituall essence wielding moving and stirring something and this nature is either create or uncreate Uncreate and so God essentially and personally is a Spirit that is incorporeall without any bodily dimension or quantity invisible God is a Spirit Create and so the Angles whether good or bad are in this sense spirits John 4.24 Which maketh his Angels spirits And after the same manner the soules of men are called spirits Gen. 2.7 He breathed in his face breath of life that is hee sent a spirit or soule into him Psal 104.4 29. When thou takest away their breath they die When the word spirit is taken for an effect it signifieth 1. The aire moved 2. The moving it selfe and motion of the aire 3. The wind and moving vapours 4. Spirituall affections or motions good or bad So it is said The spirit of fear And contrary The spirit of princes that is courage likewise the spirit of fornication 5. New spirit signifieth the gifts of the holy Spirit as 1 Thes 5.19 Quench not the spirit In this doctrine which wee have in hand Spirit signifieth the cause stirring and moving namely the third person of the God head which is forcible in the minds and wils of men And this third person of the God-head is called a Spirit Why a Spirit 1. Because he is a spirituall essence or substance incorporeall and invisible 2. Because hee is inspired of the Father and the Son that is because hee is the person by which the Father and the Son immediately work their motions in the hearts of the elect or because hee is the immediate stirrer and mover of divine works The Father and the Son move but by this Spirit 3. Because himselfe inspireth and immediately worketh motions in the hearts of the elect whence hee is called Luke 1.35 The power of the most High 4. Because hee is God equall and the same with the Father and the Son and God is a Spirit This third person of the God-head is called holy Why holy 1. Because he in himselfe by himself and of his own nature is holy 2. Because he is hallower or sanctifier that is he immediately halloweth or sanctifieth and maketh holy others The Father and the Son sanctifie by him and therefore immediately 2. Who and what the holy Ghost is THe holy Ghost is the third person of the true and only God-head proceeding from the Father and the Son and co eternall co-equall and consubstantiall with the Father and the Son and is sent from both into the hearts of the elect to sanctifie them unto eternall life Here are wee to say the same things of the God-head of the holy Ghost which have been spoken before of the God-head of the Son for this definition is also to be proved and confirmed by the same four parts Four conclusions concerning the God-head of the holy Ghost 1. That the holy Ghost is a person 2. That he is the third person or that he is other and distinct from the Father and the Son 3. That he is true God with the Father and the Son or that he is equall to the Father and the Son 4. That he is of the same God head with the Father and the Son or that he is consubstantiall unto both All these that testimony of the Apostle jointly proveth No man knoweth the things of God but the Spirit of God 1 Cor. 2.11 12. Now we have received not the spirit of the world but the Spirit which is of God that wee might know the things which are given unto us of God Also that other else where All these things worketh even the selfe-same Spirit 1 Cor. 12.11 distributing to every man severally as he will But we will proceed to treat of each of these in their order I. First therefore The holy Ghost is a person proved by sive reasons That the holy Ghost is a person is proved By his apparitions Luke 3.12 Acts 2.3 By his apparitions because hee hath appeared visibly The holy Ghost came downe in a bodily shape like a Dove And there appeared unto them cloven tongues like fire and it that is the fire or the holy Ghost sate upon each of them Seeing then the holy Ghost descended in bodily shape upon Christ and sate upon the Apostles it followeth that he is subsisting for no quality or created motion of minds or hearts is able to doe in like manner For an accident doth not only not take upon it any shape but standeth in need of something else in which it selfe should consist and be Neither is the aire the place or subject of holinesse goldinesse love of God and other spirituall motions but the minds of men By his title God 1 Cor. 3.16 Acts 5.3 4. See also Isa 40.7 13. Hee is proved to be a person because hee is called God Know yee not that yee are the temple of God and that the Spirit of God dwelleth in you Why hath Satan filled thine heart that thou shouldest lie unto the holy Ghost Thou hast not lied unto men but unto God Howsoever then the adversaries of this doctrine grant the holy Ghost to be God yet this cannot be but hee must be a subsistent or
person Acts 28.25 Ephes 4.4 30. seeing God is a being but our goldinesse goodnesse godly motions and other divine affections cannot be called God Because hee is the authour of our baptisme Hee is a person because hee is the authour of our baptisme and wee are baptised in his name that is by his commandement and will But we are not baptised by the commandement and will of a dead thing or of a thing not existing neither are wee baptised in the name of the graces or gifts of God By his properties Because the properties of a person are attributed unto him as that hee teacheth that hee distributeth gifts even as hee will that he comforteth Luke 12.13 confirmeth ruleth reigneth likewise that he sendeth Apostles John 16.13 Luke 2.26 Acts 1.16 10.19 20.23 that he speaketh in the Apostles The holy Ghost shall teach you in the same houre what you ought to say So also he declareth the things to come The Spirit of truth will shew you the things to come Hee giveth prophecies of Simeons death of Judas the traitor of Peters journey to Cornelius of Pauls bands and afflictions which should betide him at Jerusalem of a falling away and of the deceivers in the last times of the meaning of the high priests entrance into the holiest of all 1 Tim. 4.1 Heb. 9.8 10.15 1 Pet. 1.11 Rom. 14.26 Acts 5.9 of the first tabernacle of the new covenant of Christs sufferings and his glory which should follow after them and such like he maketh request for us with sighs which cannot be uttered he crieth in our hearts Abba Father he is tempted by them who lie unto him he is a witnesse in heaven with the Father and the Son he commandeth and willeth that the Apostles be separated and lastly he appointeth teachers in the Church All these things are proper unto a person existing intelligent indued with a will working and living 1 Joh. 5.7 By his distinction from Gods gifts Because he is plainly dishinguished from the gifts and graces of God All these things worketh the self-same Spirit distributing to every man severally as he will There are diversities of gifts but the same Spirit Wherefore the gifts differ much from the Spirit it selfe Obj. The gift of God is not a person 1 Cor. 12.11 Ibid. ver 4. Acts 2.38 The holy Ghost is called the gift of God Therefore he is not a person Ans The Major is false if it be universally taken for the Son being given is the gift of God and yet is a person The holy Ghost is called the gift of God because he is sent from the Father and the Son John 15.26 I will send the comforter unto you from the Father Or we may answer He is called a gift in respect that he was sent and dwelleth in the hearts of the saints to whom he is given and is such a gift as worketh by his vertue and power the rest of his gifts and graces Now that to proceed signifieth to exist or to be from both I prove Because Paul calleth him the Spirit of God which is of God and in God Of God Because the Spirit floweth from the Father and the Son In God Therefore he is some-what of God himself Other spirits are not in God that is in the substance of God And what is in God that is the very essence of God II. That the holy Ghost is other that is distinct from the Father and the Son we prove against those who say He is the subsistent of the Father namely the Sabellians Four proofs that the holy Ghost is distinct from the Father and the Son Which we prove From his appellation or name From the very appellation in that he is called the Spirit of the Father and the Son For none is his own Spirit as none is his own Father and none is his own Son Therefore he is other from both Object That which is common to all the persons ought not to be distinguished and severed The name Spirit is common to all the three persons Therefore it ought not to be distinguished Ans This whole reason we grant if it be understood of the essence of the persons and not of their order of being and working for as he that breatheth and the breath it self differ so he that inspireth and the spirit are different he that proceedeth is one and he another from whom he proceedeth the third person of the God-head is one and the first or second another But the holy Ghost is said to be the third person of the God-head and this is not in that respect as if there were in God any first or last in time but in respect of the order or manner of being because the holy Ghost hath his essence from the Father and the Son from both which he proceeded from everlasting as also he is the spirit of both In like manner the Son is called the second person because he is of the Father the Father the first person because he is of none By expresse testimony of Scripture The holy Ghost is in expresse words called another I will pray the Father and hee shall give you another Comforter There are three which bear record in heaven the Father John 14.16 1 John 5.7 the Word and the holy Ghost and these three are one The holy Ghost therefore is a distinct person from the Father and the Son By his sending from the Father and the Son Hee is sent of the Father and the Son Therefore he is another from both for none is sent of himself One may come of his own will or of himself but none can be sent of himself John 15.26 14.26 I will send him unto you from the Father The Father sendeth him in my name By his distinct attributes from the Father and the Son The holy Ghost hath distinct attributes or properties personall from them The holy Ghost proceedeth only from the Father and the Son He alone appeared in the shape of a Dove in the likenesse of fire not the Father or the Son Christ is said to have been conceived not by the Father or the Son but by the holy Ghost that is by the immediate vertue and efficacy of the holy Ghost The holy Ghost shall come upon thee Luke 1 1● and the power of the most High shall over-shadow thee Wherefore he is another from the Father and the Son which is diligently to be observed for the adversaries hereof being convicted of the person of the holy Ghost grant that he is a subsistence but of the Father and thus they argue or reason Object The vertue and power of the Father is the Father himselfe The holy Ghost is called the vertue and power of the Father Therefore the holy Ghost is the Father himself Ans This reason is sophisticall because vertue is not taken for the same in the Major for which it is taken in
the Minor for in the Major it is taken for the power of the Father in the Minor for the person by whom the Father sheweth forth his power III. That the holy Ghost is equall with the Father and the Son these arguments doe prove Four proofs that the holy Ghost is equall with the Father and the Son His proceding from both The essence of the Father and the Son is communicated unto him because hee proceedeth from both and is the Spirit of both But there is nothing in God which is not his essence Seeing then that is indivisible it must needs be whole and the same communicated unto him which is in the Father and the Son As the spirit of man which is in man is of the essence of man so the Spirit of God which is in God is of the essence of God By this it appeareth What is the proceeding of the holy Ghost namely the communicating of the divine essence whereby the third person of the God-head alone receiveth the same and whole or entire essence from the Father and the Son as from him whose Spirit hee is as also the begetting of the Son is a communicating of the divine essence which the second person of the God-head alone receiveth as a Son of his Father whole and entirely the same which the Father hath and retaineth His proceeding from the Son proved three wayes And That the holy Ghost proceedeth from the Son also is proved by certain reasons 1. Because he is called the Sons Spirit If any man hath not the Spirit of Christ the same is not his Rom. 8.9 Gal. 4.6 He hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son into your hearts The Spirit of his Son that is not given unto the Son of the Father but existing and proceeding as of the Fathers so of the Sons substance seeing the Son is equall and consubstantiall with the Father 2. Because the Son together with the Father giveth him John 15.26 John 20 22. Receive the holy Ghost 3. Because the holy Ghost receiveth the wisdome of the Son which hee revealeth unto us Hee shall receive of mine and shall shew it unto you John 16.14 But seeing the holy Ghost is true God consubstantiall with the Father and the Son hee cannot receive any thing but of him of whose substance hee is Wherefore he proceedeth of the substance of the Son because he receiveth that of him which is the Sons His divine attributes The holy Ghosts equality with the Father and the Son is proved by those divine attributes and properties which are attributed and communicated to the holy Ghost as Eternity Eternity because hee created heaven and earth and because God was never without his Spirit Gen. 1.2 The Spirit of the Lord moved upon the waters Immensity Immensity or unmeasurablenesse as who dwelleth whole and intirely in all the elect Rom. 8 9. 1 Cor. 3.16 1 Tim. 1.14 The Spirit of God dwelleth in you Through the holy Ghost which dwelleth in us Omnipotency Omnipotency because hee together with the Father and the Son created and preserveth all things Psal 33.6 1 Cor. 12.1 By the Word of the Lord were the heavens made and the hosts of them by the Breath of his mouth All these things worketh even the selfe same Spirit distributing to every man severally as hee will Omnisciency Omnisciency that is 1 Cor. 2.10 the knowledge of all things The Spirit searcheth all things even the deep things of God Infinite goodness and holiness Infinite goodnesse and holinesse and the causing of goodnesse and sanctity in the creatures Psal 143.10 1 Cor. 6.11 Let thy good Spirit lead mee into the land of righteousnesse Yee are sanctified in the name of our Lord Jesus and by the Spirit of our God Unchangeablenesse Unchangeablenesse Acts 1.16 This Scripture must needs have been fulfilled which the holy Ghost spake Truth infallible Truth not to be doubted of and the fountain of truth When the Comforter shall come John 15.26 1 John 5.6 even the Spirit of truth The Spirit is truth Mercy unspeakable Unspeakable mercy The love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the holy Ghost which is given unto us Rom. 5.5 8. ●6 The Spirit also helpeth our infirmities Indignation against sin Indignation against even hidden sinnes They rebelled and vexed his holy Spirit The blasphemy against the holy Ghost shall not be forgiven unto men Isa 6● 10 Mat. 12.31 Acts ● 9 Ephes 4.30 Why have yee agreed together to tempt the Spirit of the Lord Grieve not the holy Spirit of God by whom yee are sealed His divine works The same divine works which are attributed to the Father and the Son are also attributed to the holy Ghost and these both the generall and universall works as the generall creation preservation and government of the whole world His Spirit hath garnished the heavens The Spirit of God hath made me and the breath of the Almighty hath given mee life And also singular and speciall effects as miracles John 26.13 33.4 Mat. 12.28 1 Cor. 12.4 I cast out Divels by the Spirit of God There are diversities of gifts but the same Spirit Likewise those works which properly belong to the salvation of his Church as the calling and sending of Prophets The Lord God and his Spirit hath sent me Isa 48.6 Acts 13.2 20.28 The holy Ghost said Separate mee Barnabas and Saul Take heed to all the flock whereof the holy Ghost hath made you overseers The bestowing of competent and fit graces for the ministery on ministers The holy Ghost shall teach you Luke 1● 12 2 Cor. 12.7 The manifestation of the Spirit is given to every man to profit withall The publishing of the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles Holy men of God spake as they were moved by the holy Ghost 1 Pet 1.21 The instituting of Sacraments Baptise them in the name of the Father Mat. 28 1● the Son and the holy Ghost Whereby the holy Ghost this signified Heb. 9.8 that the way into the Holiest of all was not yet opened while as yet the first tabernacle was standing The fore-telling and prophecying of things to come he will shew you the things to come John 16.13 Acts 11.28 1 Tim 4.1 Agabus signified that there should be a great famine The Spirit speaketh evidently that in the later times some shall depart from the faith The gathering of the Church Ephes 2.22 In whom also yee are built together to be the habitation of God by the Spirit 1 Cor. 12.13 By one Spirit are wee all baptised into one body The enlightning of mens mindes John 14.26 16.13 Ephes 1.17 The holy Ghost shall teach you all things Hee shall lead you into all truth God gave unto you the Spirit of wisdome and revelation through the knowledge of him Regeneration
and faith in us 8. By whose power and by whom the Resurrection shall be THe resurrection and raising of the dead shall be wrought by Christ for by the force and vertue of Christ our Saviour We shall rise John 6.54 I will raise him up in the last day which speech of Christ is to be understood of the body For he doth not raise up the soules because they die not Now Christ-man shall raise us by the voice of his man-hood and by the vertue of his God-head John 5.28 Acts 17.31 The houre shall come in the which all that are in the graves shall hear the voice of the Son of man God hath appointed a day in which he will judge the world in righteousnesse by that man whom he hath appointed whereof he hath given assurance unto all men in that he hath raised him from the dead The use of this doctrine is to beleeve this our raising which shall be hereafter both because the raiser is of sufficient power seeing he is Almighty God and of a prone and ready will because he is our head And hence ariseth unto us great consolation and comfort Because he is true man who shall raise us therefore he will not neglect his owne flesh and members but will raise them even us will he raise to eternall life for which cause he took our flesh and redeemed us Object But the Father is said to raise us yea to raise Christ himselfe He that raised up Christ from the dead Rom. 8.11 shall also quicken your mortall bodies because that his spirit dwelleth in you Therefore we shall not be raised by Christ nor by the power of Christ Ans The externall works of the Trinity performed on the creatures are undivided or common to them all alwayes observing an order of the persons in working As therefore the Father is not excluded when raising is attributed to the Son so neither is the Son excluded when it is attributed to the Father or the holy Ghost The Father therefore shall raise us by his Son mediatly But the Son shall immediatly raise us with his spirit as being our only Redeemer Phil. 3.20 21. and Judge We look for our Saviour from heaven even the Lord Jesus Christ who shall change our vile body that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body according to the working John 5.21 whereby he is able even to subdue all things unto himselfe As the Father raiseth up the dead and quickneth them so the Son quickneth whom he will But the Spirit shall immediatly raise us up himselfe Rom. 8.11 If the spirit of him which raised up Jesus c. 9. For what end and to what estate we shall rise THe last end of the Resurrection is Gods glory For to this end shall the Resurrection be The ends of the Resurrection 1. Gods glory 2. The salvation and glory of the Elect and the damnation of the Reprobate Rev. 3.21 7.13 Dan. 12.3 that God may manifest and together fully and perfectly exercise both his mercy towards the Faithfull and his justice towards the Reprobate and so may declare the unutterable certainty of his promises in both The next and subordinate end to the former is the salvation and glory of the Elect and of the contrary the damnation and punishment of the Reprobate For the Elect or Saints of God shall rise to everlasting life To him will I grant to sit with me in my throne They shall be arrayed in long white robes They shall shine as the Sunne But the wicked shall rise to be drawne to everlasting paines and torments Mat. 25.41 Depart from me yee cursed into everlasting fire which is prepared for the Devill and his Angels And a little after And these shall go into everlasting paine and the righteous into life eternall Object Christs resurrection is the cause of our resurrection and also the benefit of Christs resurrection is our resurrection But this cause and this benefit belongeth not to Unbeleevers and Infidels Therefore they shall not rise For to whom the cause of the resurrection appertaineth not to them the resurrection it selfe no way belongeth Answ We thus make answer to the Major that To whom no cause of the resurrection belongeth they shall not rise But although this cause namely the resurrection of Christ concerneth not the wicked that is though the wicked shall not therefore rise because Christ is risen yet they shall rise for some other cause to wit for the execution of Gods just judgement whereby he shall deliver and give them to eternall paines For one and the same effect may have many and divers causes if not in number yet at least in kind especially being in divers subjects The cause therefore of the resurrection of the godly is the resurrection of Christ who is as their Head the cause of the resurrection of the wicked is not Christs resurrection for they are not the members of Christ but the justice of God and the truth of Gods menaces and judgements In a word there is no coherence in this reason They shall not rise because of Christs resurrection Therefore they shall not rise at all because they shall rise in respect of another cause which is that they may be punished There is but one end indeed of our resurrection in respect of God which is glory but the maner of coming to this end is diverse Quest 58. What comfort takest thou of the Article of everlasting life Ans That forasmuch as I feele already in my heart the beginning of everlasting life a 2 Cor. 5.23 it shall at length come to passe that after this life I shall injoy full and perfect blisse wherein I may magnifie God for ever which blessednesse verily neither eye hath seene nor eare hath heard neither hath any man in thought conceived it b 1 Cor. 2.9 The Explication THis Article is placed in the end 1. Because it is perfectly fulfilled after the rest 2. Because it is an effect of all the other Articles that is we beleeve all the other Articles because of this and all things that we beleeve in the rest were done that we might beleeve this Article and so at length injoy everlasting life This Article therefore is the end and proofe of our salvation The chiefe questions touching everlasting life are these 1. What everlasting life is 2. Of whom it is given 3. To whom it is given 4. Wherefore it is given 5. When it is given 6. How it is given 7. Whether in this life we may be assured of everlasting life 1. What everlasting life is THe question What everlasting life is may justly seem unexplicable seeing the holy Ghost hath pronounced thereof The things which neither eye hath seene Isay 64.4 1 Cor. 2.9 nor eare hath heard neither came into mans heart God hath prepared for them that love him Notwithstanding by analogy and proportion of that life whereof Philosophers dispute and Scripture speaketh
by the Passeover and other Sacrifices as also by the Sabbath which all were commanded by God that the godly might celebrate and worship God and shew themselves gratefull unto him and might withall take the signes and tokens of those benefits of God which they received by the Messias So Baptisme is a confession of Christianity and a sign whereby Christ testifieth that we are washed by his bloud The Supper of the Lord is a thanksgiving for the death of Christ and an advertisement that we are quickned and revived by his death and are made his members and shall remain and continue with him for ever OF BAPTISME ON THE 26. SABBATH Quest 69. How art thou admonished and assured in Baptisme that thou art partaker of the onely sacrifice of Christ Ans Because Christ commanded the outward washing of water a Mat. 21.19 adjoyning this promise thereunto b Ibid. Mar. 16.16 Acts 2 38. John 1.33 Mat. 3.11 Rom. 6.3 4. that I am no lesse assuredly washed by his bloud and spirit from the uncleannesse of my soule that is from all my sins that I am washed outwardly with water c 1 Pe 3.21 Mar 1.4 Luke 3.3 whereby all the filthinesse of the body useth to be purged The Explication The principall Questions touching Baptisme are 1. What Baptisme is 2. What are the ends of Baptisme or for what it was instituted 3. What is the sense and meaning of the words of the institution thereof 4. The lawfull and right use of Baptisme 5. What are the formes and kinds of speaking of Baptisme 6. Who are to be baptized 7. In place whereof Baptisme succeeded 8. How Baptisme agreeth with Circumcision THe two former of these questions touching Baptisme are handled under the 69. and 70. questions of the Catechisme the third and fourth under the 71. the fifth under the 72. the sixth under the 73. the seventh and eighth under the Common place of Circumcision which followeth immediatly after those questions of Catechisme aforenamed 1. What Baptisme is THe word Baptisme signfieth a dipping in water or sprinkling with water Those of the East Church were dipped their whole body in the water Those of the North in co●der countries are only sprinkled with water This circumstance is of no moment or weight For washing may be either by dipping or sprinkling and Baptisme is a washing The Catechisme definition is Baptisme is an outward washing with water commanded by Christ adjoyning this promise thereunto that we being baptized are no lesse assuredly washed by his bloud and spirit from the uncleannesse of our soules that is from all our sinnes then we are washed outwardly with water It may be also fitly defined on this wise Baptisme is a ceremony instituted by Christ in the New Testament whereby we are washed with water in the name of the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost to signifie that we are received into favour for the bloud of Christ shed for us and are regenerated by his spirit and also to bind us that hereafter we endeavour in our actions and death truly to testifie newnesse of life Or It is a Sacrament of the New testament ordained and authorised by Christ whereby is sealed unto the faithfull being baptized with water in the name of the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost remission of all their sinnes the gift of the holy Ghost and a planting of them into Christs body which is his Church whereby they also professe that they receive these blessings from God and will ever hereafter live unto him Or yet more briefly Baptisme is an externall washing instituted by the Son of God with the pronouncing of these words I baptize thee in the name of the Father and the Sonne and the holy Ghost to be a testimony that he who is so washed or dipped is reconciled through Christ by faith and is sanctified by the spirit unto eternall life We are said to be received into favour for the bloud of Christ shed for us to wit on the Crosse that is for Christs whole humiliation applied unto us by faith The Scriptures confirme this definition Mat. 28.19 Go and teach all Nations baptising them in the name of the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost that is testifying by the signe of Baptisme that they are received into favour of God the Father through the Son and are sanctified by his Spirit Marke 1.4 Marke 16.16 John did baptize in the wildernesse and preach the baptisme of amendment of life for remission of sins He which beleeveth and is baptized shall be saved Wherefore Baptisme comprehendeth Three things comprehended in baptisme 1. The signe which is water and the whole ceremony as the sprinkling of water or the dipping into and againe returning out of the water 2. The things themselves signified by the ceremonies which are the sprinkling of the bloud of Christ the mortification of the old man the quickning of the new man into a certaine hope of the resurrection to come by Christ 3. The commandement and promise of Christ whence the signe hath authority and power of confirming Baptisme not a bare signe only Object 1. Baptisme is said to be an externall washing of water Therefore Baptisme is a bare signe onely Ans 1. This is a fallacy of division dividing things which are to be joyned because when we say that Baptisme is an externall signe we joyn with the signe the thing that is signified Ans 2. There is no particle added in our definition which excludeth the thing And Baptisme is in its owne nature without the promise adjoyned a bare signe and to the unbeleeving who receive not the promise by faith it is indeed an externall washing only with water but the promise cometh thereto The differences betweene Baptisme and the washings of the Old Testament and is joyned with this signe when it is used aright Object 2. There were washings also in the Old Testament Baptisme therefore is no Sacrament proper to the New Testament Ans There is a great dissimilitude and difference between the washings under the Law and our Baptisme 1. The washings in the old Testament were not a signe of the entrance and receiving into the Church as our Baptisme is 2. They were instituted to wash away a ceremoniall uncleannesse as when a man had defiled himselfe by touching a dead carkasse or any such uncleane thing his ceremoniall uncleannesse was to be purged with a ceremoniall washing our Baptisme is ordained to wash away a morall uncleannesse that is sinne And hence it is that Baptisme is called in Scripture alaver or washing to wit in respect of that washing of the morall uncleannesse that is in respect of that inward or spirituall washing whereby we are washed or cleansed from our sins 3. They signifie a washing by Christ which was to come our Baptisme sealeth that washing which is by Christ already exhibited in the flesh 4. They did bind the Jewes only Baptisme extendeth and belongeth to
in the place of bread The Minor That he is not to be adored in the Supper is easily proved because in the New Testament since Christs ascension it hath not been nor is lawfull to tie and binde invocation to any certaine place or thing without the expresse command and permission of God except we will commit open Idolatry For all adoration bound and restrained to any certaine place or thing on earth is abrogated and cancelled by Christ The houre cometh John 4 21 22 23 24. when ye shall neither in this mountaine nor in Jerusalem worship the Father Ye worship that which ye know not we worship that which we know for salvation is of the Jews But the houre commeth and now is when the true worshippers shall worship the Father in spirit and truth For the Father requireth even such to worship him God is a Spirit and they that worship him must worship him in spirit and truth Againe if Christ be so to be adored and worshipped in the Supper by our minds and motions of body converted unto the bread that whole oblation and sacrifice should consist in the hands of sacrificing Masse-Priests because they offer the Sonne unto the Father to obtaine remission of sinnes and so were his crucifying to be re-iterated Object Christ commanded not himselfe to be offered or adored but to be eaten Therefore we establish not the Papists offering up of Christ to his Father or their worshipping of him in the bread by that corporall presence which we uphold Ans This their reasoning is two waies faulty First they begge that which is in question whilest they say that Christ commanded us to eate him in the bread for this is no where found in Scripture 2. They shift and seeke to slide from the question in averring that Christ commanded not himselfe to be adored for we have a generall precept of adoring Christ in these words Psal 45.13 Psal 97.7 Heb. 1.6 He is the Lord thy God and thou shalt worship him And let all the Angels of God worship him This generall precept without any speciall exception or expectation of any particular injunction should no lesse binde us all unto obedience and to the adoring of Christ in the bread if we had any evident proofe of his invisible existence therein than if we beheld him present with our eyes Thus Thomas expecteth not some speciall expresse warrant but doth well in worshipping towards the place where he seeth Christ standing saying My Lord and my God Wherefore John 20.28 as long as the opinion of corporall presence standeth so long the Papists idolatrous adoration and oblation and their whole Masse must needs stand also For the Papists themselves will not have that we understand their offering of Christ in the Masse of any slaughtering or murthering him but only of a publique shewing him being there corporally present and of a craving and obtaining remission of sinnes for his sake whom the Priests beare in their hands and present unto God the Father 4. The fourth sort of Arguments drawne from like places of Scripture where namely the samething is delivered in words whereof there is no controversie 1. LIke phrases have a like sense and interpretation But all these phrases are accounted for like namely for sacramentall formes of speech wherein the names or proper effects of the things signified are attributed to the signe as Circumcision is the Govenant of God The Lamb is the Passeover of the Lord. Gen. 17.10 11. Exod. 12.11 31.16 Levit. 1.4 Exod. 24.18 Exod. 26.34 1 Cor. 10.3 Marke 2.26 Luke 22.20 Acts 22.16 Titus 3.5 1 Pet. 3.21 Gen. 17.11 Exod. 12.13 14. 13.9 31 17. The Sabbath is the Covenant of the Lord. The Leviticall sacrifices are an expiation or doing away of sinne The bloud of sacrifices is the bloud of the Covenant The covering of the Arke is the mercy seate The Rock was Christ The bread is the body of Christ The cup is the New Testament Baptisme washeth away sinne Baptisme is the washing of the new birth Baptisme saveth us c. Therefore their interpretation is alike Now God himselfe interpreteth some of them thus Circumcision is a signe of the Covenant The Lamb is a signe and memoriall of the Passeover The Sabbath is a signe of the Covenant Therefore we may justly interpret the rest on the same manner The Leviticall sacrifices signifie the attonement for sinnes made by the Messias The bloud of sacrifices is a Sacrament or signe confirming the Covenant or a signe of Christs bloud whereby the Covenant was established The covering of the Arke signifieth the Mercy-seate The Rock signifieth Christ The bread is a Sacrament of the body of Christ The cup is a Sacrament sealing the new Covenant Baptisme is a Sacrament of the washing away of sins and of our regeneration and salvation 2. As the cup is the New Testament so is the bloud of Christ the New Testament The cup is the New Testament Sacramentally that is it is a signe of the New Testament Therefore Christs bloud is a signe of the New Testament The Major is apparent because without doubt the words of Luke and Paul This cup is the New Testament in my bloud and the words of Matthew and Marke This is my bloud of the New Testament have all one meaning The Minor is proved before in the first argument and cannot be taken otherwise For the New Testament is no externall thing or ceremony but a free reconciliation with God promised in the Gospel through the bloud and death of Christ The cup then is either the thing promised or the seale of the promise but it is not the promise nor the thing promised Therefore it is the seale of the promise 3. The bread which we breake saith the Apostle is it not the communion of the body of Christ As bread is the communion of the body of Christ so also it is the body of Christ The reason is cleere because Pauls words and Christs have both one meaning seeing Paul interpreteth Christ But the bread is the communion of the body of Christ sacramentally that is it is a Sacrament or signe of our spirituall communion with Christs body For properly and literally bread cannot be termed a communion Therefore bread also is Christs body sacramentally that is it is a Sacrament or signe of Christs body Now that the communion or communication of Christs body is spirituall is thus proved 1. Paul speaketh of such a communion as whereby we being many are made one bread one body But we being many are one body spiritually Therefore the communion mentioned of Paul is spirituall 2. The communion of Christ whereof he speaketh cannot stand with the communion of Divels 1 Cor. 10.21 Ye cannot saith he drink the cup of the Lord and the cup of the Divels ye cannot be partakers of the Lords Table and of the table of the Divels The argument is not deduced from an inconvenience or an undecency as some
fondly tell us Mat. 6.24 but from an impossibility as that of Christ Ye cannot serve God and Mammon Where the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ye are not able or ye have no possibility are likewise used as well as in this place 2 Cor. 6.15 and as that of the same Apostle else-where What concord hath Christ with Belial or what part hath the Beleever with the Infidell 3. This communion of the Saints with Christ and Christ with the Saints is spiritually expounded in Scripture 1 John 1.6 7. Our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ If we say that we have fellowship with him and walke in darkenesse we lye and do not truely But if we walke in the light as he is in the light we have fellowship one with another and the bloud of Jesus Christ cleanseth us from all sinne Neither doe we in the Creed beleeve any other communion of the Saints with Christ and Christ with the Saints but that which is spirituall Hom. 24. in 1 Cor. 10. 4. Lastly Chrysostome interpreteth Pauls words of a spirituall communion Why said he not participation That he might manifest unto thee somewhat more excellent then it to wit the strongest and mightiest union that can be And a little after Why call I it communion Yea we are the selfe-same body of Christ What is the bread even the body of Christ What are they made who receive the body of Christ not many bodies but one body For as the bread is kneaded of many graines so we also are joyned with Christ 4. Out of the words of Christ John 6.62 What then if ye should see the Sonne of man ascend up where he was before It is the Spirit that quickneth the flesh profiteth nothing the words that I speake unto you are spirit and life In these words Christ expresly rejecteth all eating of his flesh with our mouths and overthroweth by two arguments which wee have heretofore declared and on the other side he approveth and confirmeth our spirituall eating his flesh Wherefore we may not forge any corporall eating of Christs body in the Supper when such a kinde of eating is precisely reproved in the Gospel Object The sixth chapter of John treateth not of the Supper Therefore this testimony maketh nought against the eating of Christs body with our mouths instituted in the Supper Answ Here our Adversaries deceitfully argue from the deniall of a part to the deniall of the whole This Chapter we grant pertaineth not to the Ceremony of the Supper But hence it followeth not that simply it pertaineth not to the Supper For it concerneth the promise This is my body which is given for you because this promise is desumed out of this Christs Sermon registred in this sixth of John and is ratified and confirmed by the signes of bread and wine Wherefore it cannot be understood of any other eating of Christs body in the Supper then of that which is delivered in the sixth of John which is spirituall For bodily eating is in that Sermon condemned Repl. It is not simply the eating with the mouth that is there condemned but a Capernaiticall eating Answ All eating with the mouth is Capernaiticall For a Capernaiticall eating is not a bloudy renting onely and eating of Christs flesh and chewing it between the teeth but simply any eating with the mouth For the Capernaites say not among themselves How can this man give us his flesh to devoure to gnaw on with our teeth to rend asunder c. But they say How can this man give us his flesh to eate John 6.54 Neither doth Christ re-call them from a grosse eating with the mouth to a subtile kinde of eating with the mouth but to his ascension into Heaven which should shortly come to passe and thereby his body should be far removed from their mouthes and trained them to a spirituall eating which is with the heart by faith 5. Out of the same sixth Chapter of John To eate Christs flesh and To drinke his bloud signifieth To beleeve in Christ To dwell in Christ and Verse 54 56. To have Christ dwelling in us as appeareth because he attributeth the same effect of eternall life to both namely to the eating of his flesh and to faith in him But in the Supper this eating is authorised For no other purpose besides this can be shewed in the whole Gospel for sealing whereof the Supper was instituted Therefore To eate Christs body and To drink his blood is To beleeve in Christ To dwell in Christ and To have him dwelling in us 6. By one spirit are we all baptised into one body whether we be Jews or Grecians 1 Cor. 12 13. whether we be bond or free and have beene all made to drink into one spirit Hence we draw two arguments 1. Such as is the drinking of Christ such is the eating of him in the Supper The drinking of him is spirituall Therefore the eating of him is spirituall 2. The eating of Christs body and drinking his bloud is common to all the faithfull even to the Fathers of the Old Testament For we have all bin made to drink into one spirit But the eating with the mouth is not common to all the faithfull For the Fathers before Christs birth could not and at this day Infants and many of ripe yeeres having not liberty to partake of the Supper cannot eate his flesh with their mouthes Wherefore this mouthy eating of Christs flesh urged by our Adversaries is not that true eating which the Gospel promiseth and which the Supper sealeth The testimonies of Fathers in this point UNto these arguments drawne out of the sacred Scripture and the ground of our faith may be added testimonies of the Fathers and the purer Church who if we looke into their writings we shall finde that they plainly teach the same doctrine touching the Lords holy Supper which we do Among many we will produce onely some few notable and cleere in this point Irenaeus saith Lib. 4. cap. 34. The earthly bread taking his name from the word of God is no longer common bread but becometh the Eucharist or Sacrament which consisteth of two things an earthly and an heavenly thing Tertullian The bread which he tooke and distributed among his Disciples he made it his body saying This is my body that is The figure of my body Lib. 4. contra Marcion Praedag lib. 2. cap. 2. Lib. 2. Ephes 3. Serm. de Coena Clemens of Alexandria This is to drinke Christs bloud to be partaker of Christs immortality Cyprian Neither can his blood wherewith we are redeemed and justified seeme to be in the Chalice when the wine faileth in the Chalice wherein Christs bloud is shewed which is spoken of in every Sacrament and testimony of Scripture Againe the same Father saith As often as we doe this we sharpen not our teeth to bite withall but we breake and part the sanctified bread with a sincere
the substance of bread and wine is quite abolished and the accidents onely remaine 7. The end of the Supper is the confirmation of faith in Christ and his one onely sacrifice The end of the Masse is a confirmation of that opinion of workes meritorious for their very working and performance and a deniall of Christs sacrifice 8. The Supper teacheth us that Christ is to be adored above in heaven The Masse-mongers adore him under the formes of bread and wine These differences prove that the Popish Masse in the foundation and ground thereof is nothing else but a deniall of CHRISTS onely sacrifice and an horrible Idolatry They further point out unto us many causes for which the Popish Masse ought to be suppressed abolished and abandoned far out of the Church Nine causes why the Masse is to be abolished of which are these here expressed 1. The Popish Masse is a manifold corrupting or rather abolishing of the whole rite instituted by Christ For it taketh away the cup from the people and admitteth many childish toyes unknowne to the Apostles and never practised by religious antiquity when as notwithstanding no creature hath any power to institute any Sacraments or to change and abolish the constitutions and ordinances of God 2. The Masse taketh away the signe and Sacrament it selfe because it transformeth the signe into the thing signified For it denieth that there is any bread and graine remaining but saith it is the flesh and bloud of Christ substantially which is flat repugnant to the nature of a Sacrament which admitteth not that the substance of the signes be abolished nor requireth a physicall connexion of the signes and things signified and therefore no transubstantiation or corporall presence in the Supper but leadeth us unto Christ crucified and now reigning in heaven and thence communicating himselfe unto us 3. The opinion of Merit in the worke done is grounded on the Masse For the Masse-Priests feigne that the Masse is a propitiatory sacrifice which for its own worth doth merit even by the worke it selfe wrought that is through the externall right and action both for him that celebrateth and for others remission of sins Whereas even Moses sacrifices had not this property or power but the only sacrifice of the Son of God once offered for us whereunto the Lords Supper leadeth and directeth us and from which the Masse with-draweth us In what sense the Fathers call the Supper a sacrifice The Fathers indeed sometimes call a supper a Sacrifice and so it is but an Eucharisticall or thanksgiving sacrifice not a propitiatory sacrifice as the Papists dreame And the Supper verily is even that same sacrifice which Christ offered in such sort as the bread is that body which Christ gave for us but sacramentally But our Masse-Priests will have the Masse to be not the same sacrifice which Christ offered but diverse and different from it For they terme it a sacrifice without blord whereby is obtained remission of sins Therefore in very truth they deny Christs bloody sacrifice whilst they deny that Christ hath perfectly merited remission of sinnes and invent another sacrifice for the purging of sin howsoever in words they professe that they offer no other sacrifice then that which Christ offered For it is one thing for the same sacrifice to be often offered which cannot be verified of Christs sacrifice and another thing for one sacrifice to be once offered and that sufficient to take away all sins which the Scripture affirmeth of Christs sacrifice For these speeches are contradictory This sacrifice alone is sufficient for remission of sins and This sacrifice with others is offered for sins 4. In this errour another lurketh whereas they beare us in hand that by their Masses they are able to obtaine remission of sins and redemption of soules for such as are absent dead or in Purgatory though Gods word contrariwise reach that we shall be cloathed in heaven if we be found cloathed and not naked on earth and that we shall be judged as we are found in our departure out of this life Cont. Demet. For saith Cyprian When we are once deceased and have departed this life there is no place for repentance no effect of satisfaction here life is either lost or gained here we procure eternall salvation by our worship of God and fruit of faith 5. Hereof also is hatched another fancy seeing they feigne that by that worke of offering the sacrifice in the Masse they do not only merit remission of sins but other benefits also as healing of sick men sheep horses oxen swine c. Wherefore they feigne that in the Masse corporall blessings and different in kinde from those which are promised in the Gospel and sealed by the Sacraments are imparted unto them 6. The Masse is repugnant to Christs Priest-hood because he is the onely High Priest who hath power to offer himselfe The Pope with his companions most impudently pulleth this honour to himself For these deceivers and lying men feigne with great contumely and despite to Christ that they offer againe Christ unto the Father and that they alone are worthy men to offer Christ unto his Father when yet no man no Angel neither any creature is of that dignity and worthinesse as that he may sacrifice the Sonne of God For the Priest is above the sacrifice they therefore who will be the Priests to offer Christ mount and lift themselves above him Object The Priests slay not but offer only and present the Son unto the Father that for his sake he may remit us our sinnes and so they only apply that one and only sacrifice of Christ Ans It is enough that they say that they offer Christ with their hands For it remaineth that they make themselves Priests and so place themselves above Christ the Son of God Neither is it materiall that they deny that they slay Christ Many things were offered of old by the Priests which were not slain neither were of that quality but were only offered as cakes and liquid offerings and burnt offerings and other such like The Jewes indeed slew Christ but it cannot thence be affirmed that they did sacrifice him but Christ himselfe was willingly slaine and therefore sacrificed himselfe Christ through the eternall spirit offered himselfe without spot to God Heb 9 1● Heb. 9.28 and verily he offered himselfe once a sacrifice unto his Father for us Christ was once offered to take away the sins of many and to them that looke for him shall he appear the second time without sin unto salvation Christ after he had offered one sacrifice for sins Heb. 10.12 A propitiatory sacrifice cannot be without bloud sitteth for ever at the right hand of God Now the Papists contrary to these manifest places of Scripture will have Christ to be often offered in the Masse For they say they sacrifice him indeed but slay him not But a propitiatory sacrifice cannot be without slaughter for Without shedding of
and from Sabbath to Sabbath shall all flesh come to worship before mee saith the Lord. The externall or ceremoniall Sabbath is a certain time ordained and in stituted by God in the Church dedicated to a ceasing from works and labours and given to the Ministery of Gods Word and to the administration of the Sacraments or to the externall publike worship of God This ceremoniall Sabbath was necessary in the Old Testament to be the seventh day and that on that day as also on other holy dayes the Leviticall ceremonies should be observed This ceremoniall Sabbath is a thing indifferent in the N. Testament This externall Sabbath is also of two sorts Immediate and Mediate Immediate is that which was immediatly instituted by God himselfe and prescribed to the Church of the Old Testament and this was diversly taken in the Old Testament Divers Sabbaths in the Old Testament The Sabbath of daies The Sabbath of dayes was every seventh day of the weeke which was in a more particular sense called the Sabbath both in respect of Gods rest from the Creation of the world and in respect of that rest which was commanded the people of God to be kept on that day Hence the whole seven dayes or the whole weeke was with the Hebrewes called by the name of the chiefe day the Sabbath or Sabbaths Now in the end of the Sabbath Mat. 28.1 when the first day of the Sabbath that is of the week began to dawne Likewise Levit. 23.15 the Sabbaths of daies were other festivall dayes as the feast of the Passeover Whitsontide Tabernacles Trumpets c. because in these feasts the people were to rest as on the seventh day The Sabbath of months The Sabbath of months was the new Moones The Sabbath of yeeres The Sabbath of yeares was every seventh yeere L●v. 25.4 26 35. Levit. 25.8 wherein the Jewes were commanded to intermit the tillage of their fields And hereof also the whole seven yeeres were by a Synecdoche called Sabbaths Thou shalt number seven Sabbaths of yeeres unto thee even seven times seven yeeres The mediate externall Sabbath is that which God doth mediately constitute by his Church in the New Testament such as is the first day of the week to wit Sunday or rather the Lords day which the Christian Church ever since the Apostles time observeth instead of the seventh or Sabbath day in respect of Christs resurrection witnesse that of John I was ravished in spirit on the Lords day Revel 1.10 More briefly thus The ceremoniall Sabbath is twofold one of the old Testament another of the new The old Sabbath was tied to the seventh day and the keeping of it was necessary and was the precise worship of God The new Sabbath dependeth on the arbitrement or appointment of the Church which for certaine causes maketh choice of the first day and that first day is to be observed for orders sake but without any opinion of necessity as if that and no other were to be observed by the Church of which difference more shall be spoken in the Question next ensuing A Table of the distinction of the Sabbath The Sabbath that is to say the ceasing or rest from working is 1. Internall morall and spirituall as the rest from sinne 2. Externall and Ceremoniall instituted by God 1. Immediately in the old Testament as the Sabbath of 1. Dayes which were the 1. Seventh day 2. Feast-dayes of the Passeover Whitsunday c. 2. Months as the new Moones 3. Ye●res as every seventh yeare 2. Mediately by the Church in the new Testament as the Lords day 2. How the Sabbath belongeth unto us Christians THe Sabbath of the seventh day was even from the beginning of the world designed by God to signifie that men should after the example of God himself rest from their labours and especially from sinnes and afterwards in Moses law this Commandement was againe repeated and then with all was the ceremony of ceasing from labour on the seventh day ordained to be a Sacrament that is a signe and token of that sanctifying whereby God signifieth himselfe to be the Sanctifier of his Church that is to pardon her all her sinnes and offences to receive her to favour to endue and rule her with his holy Spirit for the beginning of new and everlasting life in her in this life which afterwards should be accomplished and perfected for and by the Messias promised to the Fathers And this is the reason why the Ceremoniall Sabbath of the seventh day is now abolished namely because it was typicall admonishing the people of their own duty towards God of Gods benefits towards them which was to be performed by Christ for which selfe same cause also all the other Sacraments and Sacrifices and ceremonies made before and after the Law were abolished by the coming of Christ by whom that was fulfilled that they signified But although the Ceremoniall Sabbath is abrogated and disannulled in the new Testament yet the Morall Sabbath continueth still and belongeth unto us and doth still remain which is that some time is to be allotted for the Ministery of the Church For as heretofore in the Jewish Church so now in the Christian Church we must ever have some day wherein the Word of God may be taught in the Church and the Sacraments administred But neverthelesse we are not restrained or tied to have either Saturday or Wednesday or any other certaine day For the Apostolike Church to distinguish it selfe from the Jewish Synagogue according to the liberty where-with shee is enfranchised by Christ instead of the seventh day hath on good reason made choice of the first day namely because on that day was Christs resurrection whereby the spirituall and internall Sabbath is begun in us Briefly the Sabbath doth not belong to us Ceremonially in speciall and particular albeit it doth belong to us and so to all men and ever continueth both morally and ceremonially in generall that is wee must have some day wherein the Church may be instructed and the Sacraments administred but wee are not tied to any certaine day Object against the abrogating of the Ceremoniall Sabbath The Jews against the abrogation of the Ceremoniall Sabbath thus urge Ob. 1. The Decalogue is a perpetuall law The commandement of the Sabbath is a part of the Decalogue therefore it is a perpetuall law and not to be abolished Ans The Decalogue is a perpetuall law as it is a Morall law But the Additions or circumstances and limitations of the Morall precepts annexed by way of signification were to be kept untill the coming of the Messias Object 2. The commandements of the Decalogue belong unto all This is a commandement of the Decalogue therefore it belongeth unto all Answ The commandements of the Decalogue which are morall belong unto all But this commandement is in part ceremoniall and so as it is ceremoniall it belongeth not to us albeit the generall belong unto us The reasons
the law condemned us and the Spirit of regeneration bending and inclining our hearts not to an hatred of the law wherewith they first did burn but to the study and desire of obedience and righteousnesse Therefore he addeth Rom. 7.4 That ●ee should be unto another who is raised up from the dead that yee should bring forth fruit unto God Againe Wee are delivered from the law being dead unto it Rom. 7.6 wherein wee were holden that wee should serve in newnesse of spirit and not in the oldnesse of the letter In the other place this is the Apostles meaning I through the law to wit which accuseth us of sin and terrifieth the consciences of men am dead to the law that is cease to seek for righteousnesse in the law and begin to seek for it in Christ For this is it which he addeth I am crucified with Christ namely by the participation of Christs merit and the mortification of sin that I might live to God according to the will of God expressed in the law For hee liveth to God who obeyeth God and honoureth him through his obedience But this the doctrine of the law doth not work in nature now corrupted except we passe from the law to Christ by faith that he may live in us and we in him that is that he may be effectuall in us through the working of his holy Spirit 1. By suggesting and speaking comfort in our hearts of the remission of our sins then by making us like unto himselfe by regeneration that the law may no longer condemne us and cause wrath but we may delight in the law of God concerning the inner man Rom. 7. So then we are delivered from the law and die to the law so Christ liveth in us that we begin to delight in the law and to order our life according to the prescript thereof For Christ doth not restore any other righteousnesse or any other image of God in us by his Spirit than which was created in our nature darkned and eclipsed by sin and described in the law neither is there another spirit authour of Gods law and worker of our conformity with God in our nature uncorrupted and restored Object 11. I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel not according to the covenant that I made with their Fathers Jerem. 31.31 Here they say That God promiseth not to renew ehe old covenant which is the law but to make a new which is the Gospel Wherefore not the law but the Gospel only is to be taught in the Church of Christ But it is manifest that the new covenant is not diverse from the old as touching the substantiall but only as touching the accidentall parts or conditions and circumstances thereof For although the old shadowes and dark types are taken away and a most cleere doctrine of the prophecies and figures fulfilled by Christ hath succeeded and the grace of the holy Ghost is shed more plentifully on men in the New Testament than in the Old yet notwithstanding there was one and the same manner and way both of obtaining salvation and of Gods spirituall worship in times past that now is Unto this beare witnesse the words themselves of the Prophet Jeremy Jerem. 31.33 I will write in their hearts my law hee saith not another law but the same which in times past I gave them Jerem. 31.34 I will be their God and they shall be my people I will forgive their iniquity and will remember their sins no more For these conditions of the covenant are found as well in the Old as in the New The difference only is that these are not the proper benefits of the law but of the Gospel which two parts of the Old and New Testament the Prophet here opposeth one to the other calling the law the old covenant and the Gospel the new covenant as being the principall part of the covenant and therefore he ascribeth these blessings to the new covenant because thereon dependeth whatsoever grace of Christ befell unto the old Church and therein are those blessings more fully manifested and exhibited by Christ which were also promised and granted in the old for Christ If then God will write the law which was first written in tables of stone in the hearts of men in his new covenant he doth not abolish but establish the law by the preaching of the Gospel whereby the hearts of men are regenerated that they may begin to obey the law and therefore he delivering here a difference between the law and the Gospel doth so substitute the new covenant to the old as that he saith that that part of the covenant which is the Morall law must be retained and written in our hearts Now if they urge these words which the Prophet addeth They shall teach no more every man his neighbour for they shall all know me That hereby they may conclude Jerem. 31.34 That men are not in the New testament to be willed to know God for that they shall of themselves know and obey him they erre too grosly going about to remove the instrumentall cause by reason that the effect in the N. Testament is greater and more plentifull for that men may know God and of their own accord obey him the holy Ghost worketh by the doctrine of the law and the Gospel Neither doth it follow that they are not bound neither are to be urged by incitements of exhortation because they doe their duty of themselves For binding and exhorting is a far other thing than constraining Wherefore in two respects hath the law place in instructing the regenerate namely that they may learne of the law the will of God and may also by the law be more and more incited willingly to obey God Object 12. The law is not necessary unto salvation Therefore it is not to be taught in the Church Ans This reason is a fallacy reasoning that not to be simply so which is not in some respect so For albeit the law is not necessary to this that wee should through our obedience to it be saved yet it is necessary unto other things as hath been taught already in the doctrine concerning the use of the law Object 13. In Christ are hid all the treasures of wisedome and knowledge Againe Col. 2.3.10 John 1.16 Yee are complete in him Of his fulnesse have all wee received Therefore wee must not goe back from Christ to Moses and there is no need of the law in the Church of Christ. Answ This reason deceiveth by inferring a false consequent because it proceedeth from the putting of the whole to the deniall of a part The whole wisedome and knowledge that is the doctrine of Christ delivered by him unto us is sufficient and necessary for the Church but a part of that doctrine is the Morall law also because Christ commandeth not Faith onely but Repentance also and amendment of life to be preached in his Name and hee himselfe delivered
attributing of some proprietie unto one person of the God-head to the removing of the same from another person of the God-head The words God and Father sometimes taken essentially sometimes personally Why Father is here taken essentially Esay 6.9 Againe the name of Father as also the name of God when it is opposed to all the creatures is taken essentially not personally but when it is put with another person of the God-head it is taken personally Wherefore in this place the name of Father is taken essentially and the reasons hereof are manifest 1. Because the name of Father is not here put with another person of the Godhead but with the creature of whom he is invocated So also by the Prophet Isaiah Christ is called The everlasting Father 2. The invocating of one person doth not exclude the others when mention is made of their externall and outward workes 3. Wee cannot consider God the Father but in the Son the Mediatour And the Son hath made us sons by the holy Ghost who is therefore called the Spirit of adoption 4. Christ teacheth us that wee must invocate him also John 16.23 saying Verily verily I say unto you whatsoever yee shall aske of the Father in my Name hee shall give you 5. Christ giveth the holy Ghost therefore it is he himself of whom we aske him Object 2. Christ is called and is our brother Therefore he is not our Father Ans He is our brother in respect of his humane nature but he is our Father in respect of his divine nature Object 3. If he be called the Father who hath received us into favour for Christs sake then is not Christ understood by the name of Father because hee that receiveth us into favour for Christs sake is not Christ himselfe But the Father whom wee here so call receiveth us into favour for Christs sake Wherefore hee is not Christ Ans Hee that receiveth us into favour for Christs sake is not Christ himselfe that is in the same sense and respect Christ as he is our Mediatour is hee through whom wee are received but as hee is God hee is he that receiveth us Two causes why we say Our Father Our Christ willeth us to call God our Father not my Father Confidence Thereby to raise in us a confidence and full perswasion that wee shall be heard For because we pray not alone but with us the whole Church doth with one consent pray to him he doth not reject her but heareth her prayers according to this promise of our Lord Where two or three are gathered c. Object But oftentimes thou prayest at home the Church not being privy thereunto Ans The godly and the whole Church pray for themselves and all the members with an affection and desire Love and desire is an habituall quality of the soule remaining also when thou sleepest it is not a passion quickly fleeting or passing away Therefore when thou prayest alone at home in words the whole Church prayeth with thee in affection And this also maketh much for the engendering of confidence in us because as hath been said God doth not reject the whole Church Mutuall love Two causes why Christ admonisheth us of mutuall love doth hee by this word To admonish us of mutuall love wherewith Christians being endued must pray one for another And therefore doth hee by this word in the very Proeme and entrance of the prayer admonish us of mutuall love wherewith we must be affected towards our neighbour 1. Because there is no praying without the true love of our neighbour 1 John 4.20 neither can wee be perswaded that God heareth us For if wee approach unto God not accounting the sons of God for our brethren neither will he then account us for his sons 2. Because without the love of our neighbour there is no true faith and without faith there is no true prayer For whatsoever is not of faith is sin Rom. 14.23 Object It is the part of a Father to deny nothing to his children but God denyeth many things to us therefore hee is not our Father Ans It is the part of a Father to deny nothing unto his children that is which is necessary and wholesome for them but it is the part of a Father to deny to his children things unnecessary unprofitable and harmefull Thus God dealeth with us giving us all spirituall and corporall blessings that are necessary profitable and wholesome for us Quest 121. Why is that added Which art in heaven Ans That we conceive not basely or terrenely of Gods heavenly Majesty a Jere. 23.24 Acts 17.24 25 27. and also that we look for and expect from his omnipotency whatsoever things are necessary for our soul and body b Rom. 10.12 The Explication THe second part of the Proeme is Which art in heaven that is heavenly Heaven here signifieth the habitation of God and the holy Angels and blessed men whereof God saith heaven is my throne and Christ saith In my Fathers house are many mansions Esay 66. v. 1. John 14.2 God indeed by his immense essence is every-where but hee is said To be in heaven and To dwell there because there God is more glorious than in this world and doth also there immediatly shew and manifest himself Now the Lord willeth us to call him Eight causes why wee are to call God Our Father in heaven our Father which is in heaven To distinguish him from earthly Fathers 1. Thereby to shew the opposition and contrariety of earthly Fathers and this Father that so wee should thinke that God reigneth in heavenly glory and majesty and is a Father not earthly but heavenly even hee 1. Who sitteth in heaven 2. Who ruleth every-where with heavenly glory and majesty hath soveraignty over all things and governeth by his providence the whole world by him created 3. Who is void of all corruption and change 4. Who also doth there especially manifest himself before the Angels and doth there shew what a Father he is how good and how mighty and rich To worke in us confidence of being heard 2. To raise up in us a confidence that God heareth us For if hee be our Father and one that is endued with exceeding goodnesse which hee especially manifesteth and declareth in heaven then will hee also give us all things necessary to salvation and if this our Father be Lord in heaven and so omnipotent whereby hee is able to help us then is hee able most easily to give us those things which wee aske of him To worke in us reverence of him 3. To raise a reverence of him in us Seeing this our Father is so great a Lord that is heavenly who reigneth every-where who is able to cast both body and soul into hell fire let us then reverence such a Lord and approach unto him with exceeding submission both of minde and body 4. That wee call on him in fervency of
Churches consent therein 22. What wee beleeve concerning the holy Catholike Church 346. 347. What the Church is 347. how many waies taken 348. The difference between the visible and invisible Church ibid. Her markes 349. Why shee is called One Holy Catholike Church 350. Seven differences between Church and Common-wealth 351. Whence ariseth the difference between the Church and the rest of mankind ib. Whether any can be saved out of the Church 352. Of Church-discipline Vid. Discipline or Ordinances 542. c. Circumcision What and why instituted 422. Why abolished 423. Baptisme succeedeth it ibid. How Baptisme and Circumcision agree and how they disagree ibidem Why Christ was circumcised 424. Comfort What. 31. The true comfort proper to the Church 32. How many parts there are of this comfort ibidem Why spirituall comfort is the onely good and sound comfort 33. How many things are required for the attaining of this comfort 34. Communion What is meant by the Communion of Saints Vide Saints 360. Conception Three things to be observed in Christs conception 271. The full meaning of the Article of Christs conception page 272. Concupiscence What. 614. How it differs from Originall sin ibid. How it is naturall unto us ibid. Conscience How it frameth a practicall Syllogisme pag. 39. How the Elect may sinne against conscience but not unto death pag. 55. Of sinning against conscience and not against conscience pag. 59. Consubstantiation What it is 450. It s Age and Parentage ibidem The Schisme of the Consubstantials 451. 452. Two principall grounds thereof pag. 452. The refutation of the opinion pag. 452. 453. c. 473. 474. 476. c. Contentednesse What. 608. Contracts Ten sorts of them 607. Conversion What worketh our conversion pag. 90. The parts of it pag. 500. 502. What it is and why necessary pag. 501. Why the latter part of our conversion is called quickning pag. 504. The manifold causes of it 504. 505. The effects pag. 505. Whether our conversion be perfect in this life ibidem In what a godly mans conversion differs from an ungodly mans 506. Covenant Of the Covenant of GOD and what a Covenant is 124. Diverse sorts of it ibidem Why a Covenant is called a Testament ibidem How a Covenant can be made betwixt God and Man pag. 125. Whether there be one or moe Covenants ibidem How the Sacrament is called a new Covenant 435. Creation The end of our creation pag. 40. 41. To create signifieth three things pag. 181. How the creation is unknowne to Philosophers pag. 182. Their Arguments against it ibidem Why God would have the doctrine of the creation held in the Church 188. Credulity What it is 612. Creed The Creed expounded pag. 142. 143. c. Two reasons why it is called Apostolike pag. 143. Foure reasons why other Creeds were received into the Church ibidem Why that is to be received before other Creeds ibid. The parts of that Creed pag. 144. The great wisedome and order of the Spirit and Church in disposing the Articles of the Creed 220. Crosse Foure causes for which God would have Christ to suffer the death of the crosse pag. 295. Ancient types of that death ibidem Curse What cursing is and what kindes of it are lawfull 558. D DEath How Christ is said to be dead pag. 296. Whether it were requisite that Christ should die pag. 297. For whom hee died and whether hee died for all pag. 298. Whether Christs death hath taken away our death 301. The benefits 301. Debts What Christ in the Lords Prayer calleth debts 647. Decalogue It s division pag. 527. Rules for the understanding of it pag. 528. The differences between the first and second Table in the Decalogue 529. Deceive How God is said to deceive a deceived Prophet 163. Deliver Deliverance Why the knowledge of our delivery is necessary pag. 34. 35. What mans delivery is and wherein it consists 108. Three causes of the possiblenesse of mans delivery 108.109 Arguments against it answered 110.111 Whether it be necessary certaine and absolute 111.112 two meanes for it ibidem Descension Of Christs descending into hell Vide Hell 303. c. Devils Their sundry appellations with the reasons 191. They are unchangeably evill 192. Discipline Reasons why civill discipline is necessary among the Vnregenerate 63. Of mens authority in the Church-discipline 542.543 A difference betweene Civill and Ecclesiasticall laws 544. E ELect Election That the Elect may sinne against conscience yet not unto death page 55. How farre knowne unto us 358. Whether the Elect are alwaies certaine of their election ibidem Whether they be alwaies members of the Church ibid. Whether they may finally fall 359. Equity What. 595. Erre Errour The Papists boast of their Church not erring pag. 16. Essence Vide Person Excommunication What. 482.494 Two sorts of it ibidem Persons that are to be excommunicated and the order 486. The ends and uses of excommunication 487. The abuses of it ibidem Objections against the word alledged for excommunication 492.494 F FAith Faith what it is with its nature and divers names kinds and differences 133.134 What Justifying Faith is with the causes 136.137 Faith and Hope how differing 137. The properties of justifying faith ibid. The principall cause of faith 138. Its effects 139. To whom justifying faith is given ibid. Faith with its profession necessary for five causes 140. Three waies to know that we have faith ibid. Faith may faint but not fall finally ibidem How we may be made righteous by faith onely 385.386 Three causes of it and foure reasons why it ought to be maintained against the Papists 386. Faith commeth of the holy Ghost 393. differently wrought by the Word and Spirit and Sacraments ibid. Vices contrary to faith 535. Fall Whether God doth leave the fall of man unpunished 101. The faith of Gods children shall not fall away finally 140. Fathers The use of the Fathers testimonies in points of doctrine 18. Father God called Father in divers respects 179.629 Five sorts of Superiors understood by the name of Father and Mother 590. Vide Parents Father in the Lords Prayer how taken 630. Eight causes why we are to call God Our Father in heaven ibid. Feare The feare and love of God how they differ 337. Three differences betweene son-like and slavish feare ibidem The feare of God taken for his whole worship 538. Fidelity What. 608. Flattery What. 612. Flesh The Word made flesh expounded 242.243.254 Of the resurrection of the flesh 364.365 c. What it is to eate the flesh of Christ in the Lords Supper 430.431 Forgive Forgivenesse What forgivenesse of sinne is 362.647 Who giveth it ibid. By whom 363. Whether it agreeth with Gods justice ibid. To whom and how it is given 364. Why we are to desire forgivenesse 648. How they are forgiven ibid. Fortitude What. 599. Fortune Fate or chance how accepted 214. the difference betweene Stoicks and Christians herein 215. What fortune is denied 216. Free Freedome In what God is
his body into heaven not carrying away his majesty from the g world because though he be absent in his body presenting himselfe to the Father for us and sitting at his right hand he yet dwels in the Saints by his Spirit and suffers them not to be Orphans as religious Antiquity h speakes Testimonies of Scripture and of the Ancient Fathers a Heb. 9.12 Christ by his owne bloud hath entred once into the holy place having obtained eternall redemption b Acts 1.3 After Christ had suffered he shewed himselfe alive to his Disciples with many certaine signes being seene of them for 40. dayes c Acts 1.11 Then the Apostles returned to Jerusalem from the mount called Olivet which is neere to Jerusalem being distant a Sabbath dayes journey d Acts 1.9 And when he had spoken these things while they beheld he was taken up and a cloud received him out of their sight e Austine Tract in John 50. According to the flesh which the Word assumed according to that which was borne of the Virgin according to that which was apprehended by the Jews which was fastened to the tree which was taken downe from the Crosse which was wrapped in linnen which was laid in the Sepulchre which was manifested in the Resurrection you shall not have him alwaies with you Why because he conversed according to his bodily presence 40. dayes with the disciples and they accompanying him by seeing not by following he ascended into heaven and is not here Chrysost Serm. de Ascens Domini Tom. 2. p. 328. Because the space from earth to heaven is great and the sight of their eyes could not throughly perceive the body that was carried unto such an altitude but as our eye-sight failes us when we looke upon a bird mounting high so the higher that body was elevated the more was the sight of the beholders eyes weakened nature not being able to reach higher with the eye therefore the Angels stood shewing the celestiall journey lest any should suppose but that he was carried up into heaven after the manner of Elias who was elevated thither from you Ibid. See what space is betweene heaven and earth or betweene earth and hell or how far this heaven is distant from the higher heaven or how great the space is from the higher heaven to the Angels or from the higher powers to the seat of our Lord above all these is our Nature elevated that man who was here so low that he could descend no lower should be elevated unto such an high seat that he can ascend no higher therefore Paul saith He that ascended is he also that descended Ibid. He descended into the lower parts of the earth and ascended above all heavens f John 16.28 Againe I leave the world and go to the Father g August Tract in Joh. 102. He left the world by a corporall departure he went to the Father by a corporall ascension nor did he forsake the world by his presentiall government Idem Tract in Joh. 50. The Priests commanded that if any man knew where he were he should shew it that they might apprehend him We saith he will now shew to the Jews where Christ is I wish that all who are of their seed would heare and understand who gave command that it should be shewed them where Christ is Let them come to the Church and heare where Christ is and let them apprehend him They shall heare it of us they shall heare it of the Gospel He was slaine by their parents he was buried and rose againe he was knowne of his Disciples in their presence he ascended into heaven there he sits at the right hand of the Father who was judged shall come to judge let them heare and hold Thou wilt answer Whom shall I hold One that is absent Send up faith and thou hast held him Thy parents held him in the flesh hold thou him in thine heart because Christ being absent is present for if he were not present with us he could not be held by us But because that is true which he sayes I am with you to the end of the world he is both gone and yet is here he hath both returned and not deserted us He hath entred his body into heaven and hath not taken away his majesty from the earth h Cyril in Joh. l. 11. c. 3. For though he be absent in body presenting himselfe to the Father for us and sitting at his right hand yet he dwels in his Saints by his Spirit and suffers them not to be Orphans IV. By this only Orthodox faith we know where Jesus Christ our treasure is to be sought and called upon to wit above in heaven at the right hand a of God for where our treasure is there will our b heart be from whence wee must look for him namely from c heaven where lastly our mansion must be after this life to wit in heaven where our Lord hath prepared a place d for us Testimonies of Scripture a Col. 3.1 Seeke the things above where Christ is sitting at the right hand of God b Mat. 6.21 Where our treasure is there is our heart c Phil. 3.20 Our conversation is in heaven whence we looke for the Saviour c. d John 14.3 I go to prepare a place for you I will come againe and receive you unto my selfe that where I am there you may be also John 17.24 Father I will that where I am they may be with me that they may see my glory e 1 Thes 4.17 We shall be caught in the clouds to meet the Lord in the aire and so we shall be alwaies with the Lord. V. We reject those odious fictions of the Ubiquitaries 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 onera molesta as strangers from the Christian faith concerning heaven and Christs ascension the most of which fopperies to be seene in their books are scarce worthy of Lucian Surely pious posterity will have cause enough to groane and to wonder at the power of errour 1. They say That the heaven which is above this world which Brentius saith he laughs at is an old wifes dreame or a Thalmudicall or Mahumeticall phansie 2. That the heaven into which Christ ascended is not a place nor above but is God himselfe because forsooth the heaven was incarnate and died for us that it is every-where in which also hell it selfe is and in which not only the Saints but Sathan also and his Angels are found 3. That Christ ascended often into heaven invisibly in the womb of his Mother where the Word was made flesh on the Crosse where giving up the ghost he laid aside the forme of a servant in his resurrection from the dead Lastly visibly upon mount Olivet 4. That this last Ascension was not a true Ascension into heaven but a wonderfull lifting up of Christs body even to the clouds a sight dispensed with or a visible vanishing 5. That Christ in passing to his Father that is in his ascension to heaven did not a haires
breadth move his body from the earth 6. To ascend to heaven is to put off infirmity to passe to a heavenly and immortall state to vanish to be united to God to sit at Gods right hand to be raised to high honours 7. That Christ in his Ascension hid himselfe in a cloud and Proteus-like turned himselfe into shapes or as they say he put on a cloudy hood as the Poets feigne of Venus Hom. Illiad 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who when she delivered Paris hid him in a thick cloud So Jeremie Lament 3.44 Thou hast opposed to thy selfe a thick cloud that the speeth may not passe through 8. We will not omit these bitter scoffes of the Brentians that by Mathematicall computation Christ in regard of the bulke and violent motion of his body upward hath not as yet perhaps pierced the planeticall Spheres and arrived unto his Fathers house 9. That there he is walking up and downe or perhaps laid downe to rest ARTICLE IV. of Christs sitting at the right hand of God I. CHrists sitting at the right hand of God is not the ascension it selfe into heaven for they differ 1. In order of time for he first ascended before he sat downe at Gods right a hand 2. In their forme Ascension is a locall motion b upward Session is the glorious condition of the person c ascending 3. In their proximate ends Ascension was performed for the d Session but Session for the e Church 4. In duration Ascension was done but once as being a transient act but Session as an immanent act the Kingdome and glory of Christ indure for f ever Lastly in their subjects for Ascension belongs also to the g Saints but the Session at Gods right hand is the glory of the exalted Mediatour h alone Testimonies of Scripture a Mark 16.19 After that the Lord had spoken to them he was received up into heaven and sits at Gods right hand b Acts 1.9 Whilst his Disciples beheld he was lifted up c Heb. 8.1 We have such an High-Priest who is set downe at the right hand of the throne of the majesty in the heavens d Phil. 2.9 Wherefore God hath highly exalted him and hath given him a name above all names that at the name of Jesus every knee should how 1 Pet. 3.22 Christ at the right hand of God is gone into heaven Heb. 9.24 Christ is entred into heaven that he might appeare in the sight of God for us e Ephes 4.10 Christ hath ascended far above all heavens that he might fill all things c. f Luke 1.33 Of his Kingdome there shall be no end 1 Cor. 15.25 He must reigne till he hath put all his enemies under his feet g 1 Thes 4.17 We shall be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the aire and so shall we ever be with the Lord. h Heb. 1.13 To which of the Angels said he at any time Sit at my right hand II. Neither is this sitting of Christ the Incarnation it selfe or the personall union of the flesh with the Word as some giddy heads contend because 1. In the Symbole in which is no tautologie these are distinguished 2. No where in Scripture is the humanity said to sit at the Word but to be assumed by the a Word 3. The union was made in the womb of the mother the sitting is in b heaven 4. The union was in the first minute of the conception but the sitting began after the e ascension 5. The union is simply immutable the sitting is in some sort mutable in respect of the externall forme of the Kingdome which as the Apostle d witnesseth when death is abolished shall be altogether immediate and without enemy for now Christ being in the midst of his enemies as a Rose among thornes reignes by divers media or governes by divers meanes but then he shall reigne without any medium or enemy because God shall be all e in all Testimonies of Scripture a Heb. 2.16 For he did not assume the Angels John 1.14 The Word was made flesh bc Luke 1.31 Thou shalt conceive in thy womb and shalt bring forth a Son Ephes 1.20 God hath placed Christ at his right hand in heaven d 1 Cor. 15.25 He must reigne till he hath put all his enemies under his feet the last enemy that shall be destroyed is death e Rev. 21.23 Esay 60.19 The Sun shall no more be thy light by day nor shall the brightnesse of the Moone enlighten thee but the Lord shall be thy everlasting light III. But the full and absolute glory of Christ being exalted in his heavenly Priesthood and Kingdome is expressed by this phrase taken from humane affaires and applyed to divine because Kings do most honour those whom they place at their right hand for by the right hand of God who is a spirit we cannot understand any corporeall member or place neither doth the sitting at Gods right hand signifie the corporall situation of Christ for except we understand this spiritually Tom. 6. contra Scr. Arian saith Austine the Father will be upon the Sons left hand IV. And this glory is so proper to Christ the Mediatour that it belongs not to the Father nor to the Holy Ghost much lesse to any creature for it was not said to the Father nor to the Holy Ghost nor to any Angel Sit at my right hand Heb. 1.13 untill I make thine enemies thy foot-stoole But of the Son only it is said 1 Cor. 15.25 He must reigne untill c. Whence it followes that to sit at Gods right hand is not the same that Christs humane nature omnipotent omniscient omnipresent or lastly to be equall with God or to be God himselfe whether he hath obtained that dignity by the personall union or by his ascending into heaven or by other cause V. But albeit this glory of the Mediatour is to us ineffable while we are in this life yet if we carefully compare the Apostles three places by which he chiefely describes it we shall in some manner conceive it that it principally consisteth in these Testimonies of Scripture touching Christs sitting at Gods right hand Ephes 1.20 21 22 23. God raised Christ from the dead and set him at his own right hand in the heavenly places Far above all principality and power and might and dominion and every name that is named not onely in this world but also in that which is to come And hath put all things under his feet and gave him to be head over all things to the Church Which is his body the fulnesse of him that silleth all in all 1 Cor. 15.24 25 26. Then cometh the end when he shall have delivered up the kingdome to God even the Father when he shall have put downe all rule and all authority and power For he must reigne till he hath put all his enemies under his feet The last enemy that shall be destroyed is death Phil. 2.9 10. Therefore God hath highly
and 21.6 and 22.13 The holy Ghost likewise is uncreated because in the beginning of the creation as the Creatour he moved upon the superficies of the waters Gen. 1.2 He adorned or made the heavens Job 36.13 He made and he put life in Job Job 33.4 c. He is also immense because he dwells in us Rom. 8.9 1 Corinth 3.16 2 Tim. 1.14 Hence Didymus saith well Didym lib. 1. de Spiritu sancto If the holy Ghost were one of the creatures he should have a substance circumscribed as all things that are made although they are not circumscribed For seeing the holy Ghost is in many he hath not a circumscribed substance Likewise eternall because he was in the beginning of things Gen. 1.2 and because God was never without his Spirit 9. And yet not three As the divine Essence is not multiplied with the persons because there is one common to three so the right faith forbids us to multiply Gods essentiall attributes with the persons because they are one and the same common to three As the Catholick faith then forbids us to beleeve with the Tritheits three Gods but worshippeth one God in Trinity so it forbids us to say three uncreated three immense three eternall but one uncreated one immense and one eternall it professeth to be in the Trinity ARTICLE V. 10. Likewise the Father is almighty the Son almighty and the holy Ghost almighty 11. And yet there are not three Almighties but one Almighty even so the Father is God the Son is God and the holy Ghost is God and yet not three Gods but one God So the Father is Lord the Son Lord and the holy Ghost Lord and yet not three Lords but one Lord. The Declaration 10 LIkewise almighty Here is further declared the coequality and consubstantiality of the divine persons out of the unity of the divine attributes and of the divinity it selfe because as the Father so the Son and so the holy Ghost is Almighty and God and Lord. Of the Father no man doubts The Son is also omnipotent because whatsoever the Father hath the Son hath also and therefore omnipotency Joh. 16.15 And he is called expresly God almighty Rev. 1.8 and 4.8 He is also God and the true God 1 John 5.20 God blessed for ever Rom. 9.5 Where the Name of God doth surely signifie the Divine subsistence and not the attribute onely of that subsistence against two most impudent sayings of Socinus That the simple Name of God when it is given to Christ doth no where signifie his subsistence and that it is no where found in the Scripture where the Name of God being the subject is necessarily referred to Christ The first of these is refelled by divers places of Scripture especially these Rom. 9.5 Of whom Christ is after the flesh who is above all God blessed for ever 1 John 5.20 We are in that true one in his Son Jesus Christ He is the true God and life eternall The latter is false both by these and other places Acts 20.28 God hath purchased the Church by his owne blood 1 Tim. 3.16 God was made manifest in the flesh He is also Lord. Luke 2.11 To you is borne this day a Saviour which is Christ the Lord. The holy Ghost is also omnipotent Because all graces and divine operations one and the same Spirit doth worke distributing them apart to every one as he will 1 Cor. 12.11 Likewise he is that God and Lord who spake of old by the Prophet Isaiah Acts 28.25 And by the mouth of David Acts 1.25 In whose Name we are baptised Mat. 28.19 And who is a witnesse in heaven with the Father and Sonne 1 John 5.7 The Hereticks cavill that they finde it not literally written that the holy Ghost is God which is too frivolous a subterfuge Where is it literally written the Father is God the Son is God What faithfull man will require so many letters written when the thing it selfe is written Is it not plainely written 1 John 5.7 The holy Spirit beares record in heaven And presently after The witnesse of God is greater Acts 5.3 Thou hast lyed to the holy Ghost Then by and by Thou hast lyed to God 1 Cor. 3.36 You are the temple of God and the holy Spirit dwels in you And shortly after c. 6.19 You are the temple of the holy Ghost He is also Lord because we are as well baptised in the Name of the holy Ghost that is into his worship service and obedience as in the Name of the Father and of the Son Mat. 28.19 and the Apostles call upon God who spake by the mouth of David Why did the Gentiles rage that is they call upon the holy Ghost thus Lord thou art that God who made the heaven and earth seas and all things in them Acts 4.24 11. And yet not three See Numb 8. 12. And yet not three But one Lord to wit Jesus Christ 1 Cor. 8.6 Is not then the Father Lord nor the holy Ghost Lord The Catholick faith doth thus reconcile this that onely the Father is Lord the Son and holy Ghost by the dominion of the deity common to the three Persons which consisteth in the creation and government of all things and from which dominion the Apostle 1 Cor. 8.6 excludes not the Father and holy Ghost but false gods and all creatures But Jesus Christ is the one and onely Lord by the dominion of mediation which is not common to the three Persons but proper to Christ which consisteth in the Propheticall Priestly and Kingly office of the Mediatour and from which the Apostle 1 Cor. 8.6 excludes not so much the Father and holy Ghost as the fictitious mediatours of Pagans Jews and Antichristians ARTICLE VI. 13. For as we are compelled by the Christian verity to confesse severally each person to be God and Lord so we are forbid by the Catholick faith to say there be three Gods or three Lords The Declaration 13. FOr as This Article gives a reason of the Antithesis of the fourth and fifth Article which reason was declared before out of Scripture in which alone the Christian truth and Catholick religion is grounded both in respect of the equalitie of each person as also in regard of the consubstantialitie of the same in the Trinitie therefore the Christian veritie compells us to confesse each person to be God and Lord because the Scriptures which affirme the same cannot faile as it was Number 9. And the Catholick faith forbids us to say there are three Gods or Lords because the Scriptures which affirme one God and one Lord cannot faile as is said Numb 3. and 11. ARTICLE VII 14. The Father 15. is made of none 16. nor created 17. nor begotten 18. the Sonne is from the Father alone 19. not made 20. nor created 21. but begotten the holy Ghost 22. is from the Father and the Son 23. neither made nor created 24. nor begotten 25. but proceeding There is then one Father not three
Fathers one Son not three Sons one holy Ghost not three holy Ghosts The Declaration 14. FAther This Article declares the third concerning the distinction of the persons which consisteth in a distinct manner of existing proper for each person 15. Of none The Greek is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is made of or from none having no off spring or originall from any other because he is from himselfe 16. Nor created The Greek is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 neither made of any for neither created otherwise he should be the creature of another 17. Nor begotten So it is in the Greek hence the Greek Divines call the Father 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unbegotten for if he were begotten he should be the Son not the Father And this is the manner of existing by which the Father is distinguished from the Son and holy Ghost because he is of none but of himselfe 18. The Son from the Father Not also from the holy Ghost for as the Father onely hath the Son so the Son is onely from the Father therefore he is not the Son of Abraham David and Mary but according to the flesh 19. Not made When the Apostle saith He was made of a woman Gal. 4.4 that is understood according to the flesh not according to the divinity 20. Nor created As Arius blasphemed that the Son was first created abusing a corrupted place in the Apochrypha Syrac 24.14 and depraving other Scriptures which call Christ the beginning of the creature of God to wit not a passive but an active beginning Col. 1.5.18 Rev. 3.4 21. But begotten In the Greek it is begotten of the Father and that alone therefore he is the onely begotten of the Father John 1.14 and that Wisdome that was begot before the mountaines were made Prov. 8.25 that is from eternity This eternall generation of the Son from the Father is the ineffable communication of the divine Essence by which alone the second person of the divinity from the first alone as a son from the father receives the same essence whole and intire which the father hath and this is the way of existing by which the Son is distinguished from the Father and the holy Ghost because he is onely begotten of the Father 22. From the Father So it is in the Greek from the Father as John 15.26 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Who proceedeth from the Father but Athanasius saith not from the Father alone as he spake of the Son 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the Father alone which exclusive particle when the later Grecians against the minde of the Apostles and of Athanasius at length added the Latine Church to fill up the Scriptures meaning said From the Father and the Son 23. Not made This is against the Macedonians who feigned the holy Ghost to be a creature created motions and created spirituall gifts 24. Nor begotten Because so he were the Son for to be begotten is to be the Son 25. But proceeding So it is in the Greek as it is said John 15.46 for this procession or emanation is the ineffable communication of the divine Essence by which alone the third person of the divinity from the Father and the Son as a Spirit from him whose Spirit he is receives the same entire essence which the Father and Son have Concerning the manner of this procession and generation to those that curiously enquire that of Damascen should be answered 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Dam. l. 4. Orth. Fid. c. 10. That there is a difference betweene generation and procession we have learned but which is the manner or way of this difference we know not And that of Ambrose Licet scire c. We may know that the Son is begot and so that the holy Ghost proceeds but we may not know how he is begot and how he proceeds And this is the way of existing that he proceeds from the Father and the Son for he is the Spirit of the Son no lesse then of the Father Rom. 8.9 Gal. 4.6 and he is sent from both John 15.26 he proceeds then from both ARTICLE VIII And in this Trinity 26. none is before or after other 27. none lesser or greater then other 28. but all the three persons are co-eternall among themselves and co-equall so that in all things as is said the unity in trinity and trinity in unity is to be worshipped 29. He then that will be saved must thus think of the Trinity The Declaration 26. NOne before To wit in nature and time though in order of existence the Father be the first the Son the second and the holy Ghost the third person 27. None greater Because God admits no quantity but when Christ saith he is lesser then the Father John 14.28 he saith this not in respect of his divinity but onely in regard of his mediation and humanity otherwise that could not be true when he saith I and my Father are one All that the Father hath are mine 28. But all The co-eternity then and co-equality and the co-essentiality also of the Trinity is altogether to be worshipped 29. He then that will He therefore hates his owne salvation who beleeves not the holy Trinity for Whosoever denieth the Son hath not the Father 1 John 2.23 And Who hath not the Spirit of Christ he is none of his Rom. 8.9 For no man can say that Jesus is the Lord but by the holy Ghost 1 Cor. 12.3 The Catholick Faith concerning the Incarnation of the Son of GOD our Lord JESUS CHRIST According to the Creed of ATHANASIUS briefly declared and asserted ARTICLE I. Of the Creed the ninth But 1. it is necessary unto eternall salvation that whosoever will be saved 2. he beleeve rightly the 3. Incarnation of our Lord Jesus Christ The Declaration 1. BVt it is necessary This necessity is every where delivered in Scripture John 3.36 He that beleeveth in the Son hath everlasting life and he that beleeveth not the Son shall not see life but the wrath of God abideth on him Joh. 6.14 This is the will of him that sent me that all that see the Son and beleeve in him may have life eternall John 17.3 This is life eternall to know thee the onely true God and whom thou hast sent Jesus Christ 1 John 4.3 And every spirit that confesseth not that Jesus Christ is come in the flesh is not of God Acts 4.12 Neither is there salvation in any other for there is none other name under heaven given among men whereby we must be saved Acts 10.43 To him give all the Prophets witnesse that whosoever beleeveth in his Name shall receive remission of sins by his Name By faith then in the Son of God made man it behooveth all to be saved and without this faith no man can be saved 2. Incarnation also In Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his inhumanation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his incorporation of the causes truth and manner of which Athanasius lest a famous
pacifier or reconciler of God and men asswaging Gods wrath and restoring men into Gods favour by intercession and satisfaction for their sins and by causing God to love men and men to love God so that hence issueth an inviolable peace and agreement between God and ma● How a middle person and a Mediatour differ how Christ is the one the other A middle person and a Mediatour are different because that is the name of the person this of the office both which Christ is between God the Father and us He is a middle person because in him both natures divine and humane are united personally And a Mediatour because he reconcileth us to God his Father albeit in some sort hee is also in the same respect the middle person in which he is a Mediatour because in him two extremes are joyned God and man It is demanded Whether Adam had need of a Mediatour before his fall Answer is to be made by distinguishing of the divers meanings and significations of a Mediatour If a Mediatour be meant to be such a one through whose mediation or by whom God doth bestow his benefits and communicate himself unto us Adam verily even before his fall had need of a Mediatour because Christ ever was that person by whom God the Father createth and quickeneth all things John 1.4 For In him was life to wit all both corporall and spirituall life and the life was the light of men But if the Mediatour be understood to be him who performeth both these and all other parts of a Mediatours office Adam did not stand in need of a Mediatour before his fall We must observe notwithstanding that in the Scriptures this phrase is not found whereby Christ is said to have been the Mediatour also before the fall of man 2. Whether we need any Mediatour with God for us No reconcilement without a Mediatour A Mediatour is necessary for us 1. Because the justice of God admitteth no reconcilement without the recovery and new purchase of his grace and favour therefore it is very requisite that we have an Advocate neither yet without intercession therefore we have need of an intercessor neither without satisfaction therefore a satisfier is necessary for us neither without an applying of these severall benefits for the benefits must be received therefore it became us to have such an applier Lastly not without a purging of sin and a restoring of Gods image in us to the end we may cease to offend him therefore of force we ought to have such a cleanser of our sinfull corruption and renewer of a better nature Now we are not able to perform this to wit to appease God being offended with us and to make our selves acceptable unto God we have need therefore of another Mediatour who may perform this for us 2. God required a Mediatour of the party offending for God as God would not receive satisfaction of himself but would for his justice sake that the party offending should perform the same or else obtain favour by a Mediatour and should himselfe present such a one as should be able to make perfect satisfaction and also should be most acceptable unto God lest he might suffer a repulse and farther such a one as might easily by his favour whereby he should prevaile with God reconcile us unto him through satisfying and making intreaty and intercession for us Now wee were not able to beare this person neither yet to supply any of our race and line sufficient to sustaine the same because wee were all the children of wrath Therefore we stood in need of a third Mediatour which third God tendered unto us even such a one as was both a man and a man most acceptable to God 3. They who to procure their delivery must necessarily satisfie Gods justice either by themselves or by another and are not able by themselves have need of a Mediatour But we to purchase our freedome must satisfie Gods justice either by our selves or by another and by our selves we are not able Therefore wee have need of a Mediatour But exception is made against the distinction of the Major proposition of our reason in appointing either our selves or another thus Ob. Where only one means of satisfying is set down there no other may be enquired after or proposed But the law acknowledgeth and assigneth onely one means and way of satisfying to wit By our selves Therefore wee must not set down any other neither must wee say Either by our selves or else by another Answ We grant the whole reason being understood of the law or according to the declaration of the law For in the law one onely means of satisfying is prescribed and in vain is any other sought after yet so the law assigneth one means that it denyeth not another For the law verily saith that we must satisfie by our selves but it no where saith Only by our selves The law requireth our selves to satisfie the Gospel sheweth Gods mercy admitteth another to satisfie therefore it no where excludeth the means of satisfying by another And albeit God did not expresse this other means in the law yet in his secret counsell hee understood it and afterwards revealed it in the Gospel Wherefore certainly the law discloseth no such means but leaveth it to be discovered by the Gospel Rep. The doctrine then of the Gospel is disagreeing from the law Ans It is not disagreeing for what the Gospel propoundeth that the law denyeth not because the law no where addeth the exclusive particle namely that Onely by us satisfaction ought to be made 4. That a mediatour with God is necessary for us many other things declare 1. The tremblings and torments of conscience in us 2. The pains of the wicked 3. The sacrifices ordained by God whereby was deciphered Christs only and perfect sacrifice 4. The sacrifices of the heathen and Papists whereby they labour to pacifie God because they perceive that we stand in need of satisfaction before God 3. What is the office of a Mediatour What our Mediatour doth with God THe office of a Mediatour is to deal with both parties both the offended and the offender So Christ our Mediatour treateth with either party With God who was offended he doth these things 1. He maketh intercession for us unto his Father and craveth pardon for our fault 2. He offereth himself to satisfie for us 3. He in very deed maketh this satisfaction by dying for us and suffering sufficient punishment finite indeed in time but of infinite worth and value 4. He becometh our surety and promiseth on our behalf that hereafter we shall no more offend him For without this suretiship or promise intercession findeth no place no not with men much lesse with God 5. He worketh this his covenant and promise on our part in us by giving us his holy Spirit What our Mediatour doth with us and life everlasting With us also as being the party offending he doth
Eunuch Cornelius the Jaylour of Philippi Lydia the seller of Purple Paul c. are said to have beene presently baptized Wherefore the Supper also is given onely to them who are baptized for they only are received into the Church Of this end beare witnesse those words of Christ Mat. 28.19 Goe and teach all Nations baptising them c. where the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which Christ useth properly signifieth Make Disciples Thus it is expounded by John John 4.1 The Pharisees heard that Jesus made and baptized moe Disciples then John This end is also confirmed by the substitution of Baptisme in place of circumcision which was in ancient times a Sacrament of receiving Disciples into the Jewish Church To be a discerning badge of Christians That it should be a mark whereby the Church may be discerned from all other Nations and Sects This end followeth on the former For they who by a publike Sacrament are received into the Church are by the selfe-same discerned and as by a badge distinguished from the remnant Mat. 28.19 the filth of the world Go and teach all Nations baptising them as if he should say Gather me a Church by the word and whom ye shall make my Disciples beleeving with their whole heart all them and them alone baptize and separate unto me To advertise us of the Crosse of our preservation and deliverance That it should be a signification or an advertisement unto us of the crosse and of the preservation of the Church therein and of the deliverance of the Church from it For it signifieth that they who are baptized are plunged as it were in affliction but with assurance of escaping thence Hence afflictions are term●d by the name of Baptis● Are ye able to be baptized with the baptisme that I shall be baptized with Mat. 20.22 Deliverance from the crosse the very ceremony it selfe of Baptisme doth shew For we are dipped indeed but we are not drowned or choak●d in the water Moreover in respect of this end Baptisme is compared to the floud For as in the floud and deluge Noah and his family were shut into the Arke and were after much trouble and danger saved the rest of mankind perishing so in the Church they who cleave unto Christ although they be pressed with calamities yet at length in their appointed time they are delivered whilst the rest without the Church are overwhelmed with a deluge and gulfe of sinne Hither also belongeth the place of Paul where he compareth the passing over the red sea to Baptisme 1 Cor. 10.2 All were baptized to Moses in the cloud and in the sea To signifie the unity of the Church 1 Cor. 12.13 Ephes 4.5 To signifie the unity of the Church and therefore it is a confirmation of this article I beleeve the Catholike Church By one spirit are we all baptized One Lord one faith one Baptisme This end neverthelesse may be contained under the fourth because when Baptisme severeth the members of the Church from others it doth also joyne and unite them among themselves To be a meanes of preservi●g and publishing more largely the doctrine of Gods free promise To be a meanes of preserving and propagating the doctrine of the promise of free salvation through the death of Christ that the baptized may have occasion to teach and learne who is the author and what is the meaning or signification and use of Baptisme Quest 70. What is it to be washed with the bloud and spirit of Christ Ans It is to receive of God forgivenesse of sinnes freely for the bloud of Christ which he shed for us in his sacrifice on the Crosse a Heb. 12.24 1 Pet. 1.2 Revel 1.5 Rev. 22.14 Zach. 13.1 Ezek. 36.25 And also to be renewed by the holy Ghost and through his sanctifying of us to become members of Christ that we may more and more die to sinne and live holy and without blame b John 1.33 and 3.5 1 Cor. 6.11 and 12.13 Rom. 6.4 Col. 2.12 The Explication A two-fold washing in Baptisme 1. Externall 2. Internall THere is a double washing in Baptisme externall which is by water and internall which is by the bloud and spirit of Christ The internall washing is signified and sealed by the externall and in the lawfull use of Baptisme is joyned therewith Now this internall washing is of two sorts Of bloud The washing of bloud which is our remission of sinnes and justification for the bloud-shed of Christ Of the Spirit The washing of the Spirit which is our renuing by the holy Ghost Both these are at once together performed Wherefore To be washed by the bloud of Christ is to be justified and to receive remission of sins for the bloud of Christ shed on the Crosse for us To be washed by the holy Ghost is to be regenerated by the holy Ghost which regeneration is an alteration and change of evill inclinations into good which is wrought by the holy Ghost in our will and heart that we may have an hatred of sinne and contrariwise a purpose to live according to the will of God That this two-fold washing from sins is signified by the Sacrament of Baptisme is apparent by these places of Scripture Mark 1.4 1 Cor. 6.11 John preached the Baptisme of amendment of life for remission of sinnes But yee are washed but yee are sanctified but yee are justified in the name of the Lord Jesus and by the Spirit of our God Likewise in that we are said by baptisme to die and to be buried with Christ and to put off the body of sinfull flesh and put on Christ. Wherefore Baptisme is a Symbole and signe of both washings or of both benefits namely both of remission of sinnes and amendment of life not only because this Sacrament hath some similitude and correspondence with both but also because these two benefits are ever joyned together and neither can be without the other For except Christ wash us we have no part in him and He which hath not the spirit of Christ is none of his Now our justification John 13.8 Rom. 8.9 which is a washing by the bloud of Christ and our regeneration which is a washing by the holy Ghost differ in this that justification is finished perfectly in this life by imputation as it is said There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus Rom 8.1 but regeneration or the mutation of our evill nature into good is not perfectly accomplished in this life but begun only yet so that the beginning thereof is truly in all the godly and is felt of all that are turned unto God even whilst they are in this life because all the godly have a true desire in their will and heart to obey God so that they are greatly grieved for their other defects Quest 71. Where doth Christ promise us that he will as certainly wash us with his bloud and Spirit as
we are washed with the water of Baptisme Ans In the institution of Baptisme the words whereof are these Mat. 2● 29 Goe and teach all Nations baptising them in the name of the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost He that shall beleeve and be baptized shall be saved but he that will not beleeve shall be damned a Mat. 16.16 This promise is repeated again whereas the Scripture calleth Baptism the washing of the new birth b Titus 3.5 and forgivenesse of sinnes c Acts 22.16 The Explication THe confirmation of the definition and chiefe ends of Baptism is contained in the words of the institution Mat. 28.19 Mark 16.16 which are read in S. Matthew and S. Marke Go and teach all nations baptizing them in the name of the Father and the Son and the holy Ghost He that shall beleeve and shall be baptized shall be saved but he that will not beleeve shall be damned These are briefly to be expounded and declared Teach all Teach all and not some Nations neither Abrahams posterity onely Here is the difference of the Sacraments of the old and new Testament For Christ did not institute this new Sacrament for the Jewes only to whom properly did belong the old Sacraments but to all others also succeeding Baptising them That is all who by your doctrine come unto me and are made my disciples And among them are numbred the Infants also of such as come unto Christ or are Christs disciples For their Infants also are disciples as being borne in the schoole of Christ For to be borne in the Church serveth to the Infants in stead of their profession The word is to go before the Sacrament The order here is to be noted and observed He willeth first that they be taught and after that they be baptized For he speaketh of men of yeeres which should be converted unto the faith and Gospel of Christ Wherefore he will not have the Sacraments to be dumb but signifieth that the Word ought to go before and then the Sacraments to follow Foure things signified in these words In the name of the Father Son and holy Ghost used in Baptisme In the name of the Father and the Son and the holy Ghost These words in the name signifie 1. That Baptisme was instituted by the common commandement and authority of these three and that these three persons doe command that they who will be members of the Church be baptized Wher●fore it is of like force when the Minister baptiseth as if God the Father the Son and the holy Ghost did baptize And hereof also it is manifest that these three persons are the three subsistents or persons of the God-head and are one true God into whom we are baptized 2. They signifie that these three persons confirme unto us by their owne testification that they receive us into favour and performe that unto us which is signified by baptisme which is salvation if we beleeve and be baptized where is noted the principall end of Baptisme 3. To be baptized in the name of the Father the Son and the holy Ghost is That he which is baptized be bound to the knowledge faith worship trust honour and invocation of this true God 1 Cor. 1.13 who is the Father and the Son and the holy Ghost This is the second end of Baptisme which Paul also in these words declareth were yee baptized into the name of Paul As if he should say Ye ought to be his to whom ye have given your name and bound your selves in Baptisme 4. Baptising them in the name of the Father the Son and the holy Ghost that is baptising them by invocation of the three persons invocating the name of the Father the Son and the holy Ghost upon them Which three persons receive us into favour And the Father verily receiveth us into favour for the Sonne by the holy Ghost whom the Sonne giveth us from the Father He that shall beleeve This condition is added unto the promise For they who are baptized cannot receive that which is promised and sealed in Baptism but by faith so that without faith neither is the promise ratified nor the Baptisme availeable And in these words is noted briefly the right use of Baptisme in which right use the Sacraments are ratified to them which receive them with a true faith What is the right and lawfull use of Baptisme But in whatsoever corrupt and unlawfull use and administration the Sacraments are no Sacraments but are Sacraments to them only who receive them with a true faith The right and lawfull use then of Baptisme is when the converted are baptized with observation of that rite and end which Christ appointed that is 1. When the ceremonies or rites instituted by Christ in Baptisme are not changed Whence it is manifest that the drosse and filth of Papists as oyle spettle and exorcisme or conjuration tapers salt The drosse which the Papists bloud with the simplicity of Christs institution in baptism is to be rejected and such like wherewith the defile Baptisme is to be thrown away Object But these appertaine and belong to order and comelinesse Ans The holy Ghost knew well enough what did appertaine to order and comelinesse in Baptisme Rep. But they appertaine to the signifying of some thing Ans It belongeth not to men to institute any signe of Gods will This also we are to judge and think of other ceremonies of the same hatching 2. The use of Baptisme is right When Baptisme is given to them for whom it was instituted which are all the converted or members of the Church and When of these it is received with a true faith according to that Acts 8.37 If thou beleevest with all thine heart thou maist be baptized 3. When Baptisme is used to that end whereunto it was instituted not to the healing of cattell and such like abuses 4. When Baptisme is administred by them to whom Christ hath given it in charge that is the Ministers of the Church whom Christ hath sent to teach and to baptize not by women or any other which are not sent of God And shall be baptized He would confirme us also by the outward signes and therefore this is added and shall be baptized that we may know that not only by faith but by the outward signe also we are assured that we are of the number of them who shall be saved Shall be saved That is let the baptized know that he hath those benefits which are signified by the ceremony or outward signe that is that he is justified and regenerated if he beleeve For without faith the promise is not ratified neither doth Baptisme profit at all Unto both both unto faith and unto Baptisme the promise is adjoyned but in a diverse manner unto faith as a necessary mean to apprehend salvation unto baptisme as a signe sealing the salvation we apprehend He that will not beleeve shall be condemned That is though he